Old Testament readings use the Septuagint , the Scripture the apostles quoted. Masoretic numbering shown for reference.Learn why
speed
verb intransitive
[The L. expedio may be from the same root, which signifies to drive, to hurry, of the family of L. peto.]
pret. and pp. sped
speed
To make haste; to move with celerity.
speed
To have success; to prosper; to succeed; that is, to advance in one’s enterprise. He that’s once demi’d will hardly speed. Those that profaned and abused the second temple, sped no better.
speed
To have any condition good or ill; to fare. Ships heretofore in seas like fishes sped, The mightiest still upon the smallest fed.
speed
verb transitive
TO dispatch; to send away in haste. He sped him thence home to his habitation.
speed
To hasten; to hurry; to put in quick motion. -But sped his steps along the hoarse resounding shore.
speed
TO hasten to a conclusion; to execute; to dispatch; as, to speed judicial acts.
speed
To assist; to help forward; to hasten. -With rising gales that sped their happy flight.
speed
To prosper; to cause to succeed. May heaven speed this undertaking.
speed
To furnish in haste.
speed
To dispatch; to kill; to ruin; to destroy. With a speeding thrust his heart he found. A dire dilemma! either way I’m sped; If foes, they write if friends they read me dead. Note In the phrase, “God speed,” there is probably a gross mistake in considering it as equivalent to “may God give you success.” The true phrase is probably “good speed; good, in Saxon, being written god. I bid you or wish you good speed, that is, good success.
speed
noun
Swiftness; quickness; celerity; applied to animals. We say, a man or a horse runs or travels with speed; a fowl flies with speed. We speak of the speed of a fish in the water, but we do not speak of the speed of a river, or of wind, or of a falling body. I think however I have seen the word applied to the lapse of time and the motion of lightning, but in poetry only.
speed
Haste; dispatch; as, to perform a journey with speed; to execute an order with speed.
speed
Rapid pace; as a horse of speed. We say also, high speed, full speed.
speed
Success; prosperity in an undertaking; favorable issue; that is, advance to the desired end. O Lord God of my master Abraham, I pray thee, send me good speed this day. Genesis 24:12. This use is retained in the proverb, “to make more haste than good speed,” and in the Scriptural phrase, “to bid one good speed,” .