read

read - verb

  • To learn from what one has seen or found in writing or printing
  • To deliver aloud by or as if by {a_link|reading}
  • To check (something, such as copy or proof) for errors
  • To interpret the meaning or significance of
Source: Merriam-Webster Dictionary API
"able to read his fortune"

read - thesaurus

SpellingJoy score for read

SpellingJoy Gematria

📚 Apprentice
68

Letter Values

R
21
E
5
A
1
D
7

Etymology

Middle English reden "to counsel, order, decide, guide, govern, realize, grasp the meaning of, interpret, explain, teach, look at and understand (written symbols), say aloud (something written)," going back to Old English rǣdan, (non-West Saxon) rēdan "to rule, direct, decide, deliberate, counsel, suppose, guess, expound the meaning of (as a riddle or dream), look at and understand (written symbols), say aloud (something written)," going back to Germanic *rēdan- (whence also Old Frisian rēda "to advise, protect, help, plan, decide," Old Saxon rādan "to consult, guess, take care of, counsel," Old High German rātan "to advise, deliberate, assist," Old Icelandic ráða "to advise, counsel, decide, determine, plan, rule, explain, interpret," Gothic garedan "to make provision for," fauragarairoþ "[s/he] predestined"), going back to an Indo-European verbal base {it}*(H)reh{inf}1{/inf}d{sup}h{/sup}-{/it} "carry through successfully," whence also Sanskrit rādhati "will bring about," rādhnóti "(s/he) achieves, prepares, satisfies," Avestan rādat̰ "will make right"; from a causative {it}*(H)roh{inf}1{/inf}d{sup}h{/sup}-éi̯e-,{/it} Gothic rodjan "to speak, talk," Old Icelandic ræða "to speak, converse," Old Irish ráidid "(s/he) speaks, says, tells," imm-rádi "(s/he) thinks, reflects," Welsh adroddaf "(I) utter, say, relate," Old Church Slavic neraždǫ, neraditi "to have no care for, take no heed of" (also neroždǫ, neroditi), radi "for the sake of," Bosnian-Croatian-Serbian ráditi "to work, do," Lithuanian ródyti "to show"