historical-nonfiction:

You rarely see a “wend” without a “way.” You can wend your way through a crowd or down a hill, but no one wends to bed or to school. However, there was a time when English speakers would wend to all kinds of places. “Wend” was just another word for “go” in Old English. The past tense of “wend” was “went” and the past tense of “go” was “gaed.” People used both until the 1400s, when “go” became the preferred verb, except in the past tense where “went” hung on, leaving us with an outrageously irregular verb.

from Tumblr http://ift.tt/2gMokn4

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Responding with a post on your own blog? You can connect it back to this one with a Webmention by writing something on your site that links to this post, and then entering your post URL here. I have comments moderated for approval to control spam, so it may not show up immediately. If you want to update or remove your response, you can update or delete your post and then re-enter the URL here again. (Learn more.)