wait
verb intransitiveTo stay or rest in expectation; to stop or remain stationary, till the arrival of some person or event. Thus we say, I went to the place of meeting, and there waited an hour for the moderator or chairman. I will go to the hotel, and there wait till you come. We will wait for the mail.
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To stay proceedings, or suspend any business, in expectation of some person, event, or the arrival of some hour. The court was obliged to wait for a witness.
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To rest in expectation and patience. All the days of my appointed time will I wait, till my change come. Job 14:14.
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To stay; not to depart. Haste, my dear father, tis no time to wait.
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To stay; to continue by reason of hindrance.
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To lie in ambush, as an enemy. Such ambush waited to intercept thy way. To wait on or upon, to attend, as a servant; to perform menial services for; as, to wait on a gentleman; to wait on the table. To wait on,
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To attend; to go to see; to visit on business or for ceremony. Tell the gentleman I will wait on him at ten o’clock.
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To pay servile or submissive attendance.
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To follow, as a consequence; as the ruin that waits on such a supine temper.
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To look watchfully. It is a point of cunning to wait on him with whom you speak, with your eye.
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To attend to; to perform. Aaron and his sons shall wait on their priests office. Numbers 3:10; Numbers 8:24; Romans 12:7.
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To be ready to serve; to obey. Psalm 25:3; Proverbs 20:22. To wait at, to attend in service; to perform service at. 7 Corinthians 9:13. To wait for, to watch, as an enemy. Job 15:22.
wait
verb transitiveTo stay for; to rest or remain stationary in expectation of the arrival of. Awd with these words, in camps they still abide, and wait with longing eyes their promisd guide.
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To attend; to accompany with submission or respect. He chose a thousand horse, the flowr of all his warlike troops, to wait the funeral.
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To attend as a consequence of something. Such doom waits luxury-- .
wait
nounAmbush. As a noun, this word is used only in certain phrases. To lie in wait, is to lie in ambush; to be secreted in order to fall by surprise on an enemy; hence figuratively, to lay snares, or to make insidious attempts, or to watch for the purpose of ensnaring. Joshua 8:4. In wait, is used in a like sense by Milton. To lay wait, to set an ambush. Jeremiah 9:8.