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set forth (v.)

verbal phrase, mid-13c. (intrans.), "express openly, present to view or consideration, make fully known;" c. 1400 as "leave, begin a journey" (set out in the same sense is from late 14c.); see set (v.) + forth (adv.). The notion of set involved in it is "proceed in a specified direction," hence begin to move" (attested from late Old English). From late 14c. as "prepare and send out, issue" (a commandment, etc.). Of a price from 1520s. Intransitive sense of "go, advance, begin to march" is from mid-14c.

also from mid-13c.
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Trends of set forth

updated on June 18, 2022

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Dictionary entries near set forth

session

sestet

sestina

set

Set

set forth

set off

seta

set-aside

setback

Seth