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swashest

 - 2 dictionary results

swash

[swosh, swawsh]
–verb (used without object)
1. to splash, as things in water, or as water does: Waves were swashing against the piers.
2. to dash around, as things in violent motion.
3. to swagger.
–verb (used with object)
4. to dash or cast violently, esp. to dash (water or other liquid) around, down, etc.
–noun
5. the surging or dashing, sometimes violent, of water, waves, etc.
6. the sound made by such dashing: the thunderous swash of the waves.
7. the ground over which water washes.
8. Chiefly Southeastern U.S. a channel of water through or behind a sandbank.
9. Printing. an extending ornamental flourish, as on letters of certain fonts of italic or cursive type.
–adjective
10. Printing. noting or pertaining to a character having a swash: a swash letter.

Origin:
1520–30; imit.
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
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Word Origin & History

swash 
1538, "the fall of a heavy body or blow," possibly from wash with an intensifying s-. It also meant "pig-wash, filth, wet refuse" (1528) and may have been imitative of the sound of water dashing against solid objects. The meaning "a body of splashing water" is first found 1671; that of "a dashing or splashing" 1847.
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2001 Douglas Harper
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