NIGH


Meaning of NIGH in English

I. ˈnī adverb

( -er/-est )

Etymology: Middle English nigh, neigh, neih, neh, adverb & adjective, from Old English nēah, nēh; akin to Old Saxon nāh, adverb & adjective, nigh, Middle Dutch nā, preposition & adverb, Old High German nāh, adverb & adjective, nigh, preposition, nigh, after, Old Norse nā- (in composition) nigh, Gothic nehw, nehwa, adverb, nigh, and perhaps to Sanskrit naśati he attains, reaches — more at enough

1. : near in place, time, or relationship — often used with on, onto, or unto

served … for nigh on forty years — M.S.Tisdale

my end draws nigh ; 'tis time that I were gone — Alfred Tennyson

2. : nearly , almost

the already nigh obliterated records of childhood — Osbert Sitwell

II. adjective

( -er/-est )

Etymology: Middle English nigh, neigh, neih, neh, from Old English nēah, nēh, adjective & adverb

1. : close

man in … friend, brother, nighest neighbor — Walt Whitman

— often used predicatively

vow that my heart, when death is nigh — Sidney Lanier

— often used with a preposition

some so silent, dark, and nigh to death — Walt Whitman

2. chiefly dialect : direct , short

took a nigh cut through the hill paths home — J.H.Stuart

3. : near IV 3b

4. chiefly dialect : stingy

III. preposition

Etymology: Middle English nigh, neigh, neih, neh, from Old English nēah, nēh, probably from nēah, nēh, adverb

: near

everyone wanted to be next and nigh me — Padraic Colum

IV. verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

Etymology: Middle English nighen, neighen, neihen, neghen, from nigh, neigh, neih, adverb

transitive verb

: to draw or come near to : approach

strapped, noosed, nighing his hour — A.E.Housman

intransitive verb

: to draw near

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.