出典:Wiktionary
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2026/01/22 01:15 UTC 版)
From 中期英語 whider (“to what place?; into or to which; to what place, where; no matter where, to wherever”), from 古期英語 hwider, hwæder (“to what place, where”), from Proto-Germanic *hwadrê (“to what place, where”), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *kʷos (“what; which”), from *kʷ- (the primary interrogative root).
whither (not comparable) (formal, archaic except literary or poetic)
Use the following table to determine which adverb to use in a given context. For example, the word hither can be used to mean “to here”, and whence to mean “from where”.
whither (plural whithers)
The verb is borrowed from Scots whidder, whither (“(of the wind) to bluster; to move quickly”), a frequentative form of whid (“(of wind) to gust; to move quickly”), of Scandinavian/North Germanic origin, from Old Norse hviða (“gust of wind”).
Related to 中期英語 hwiþa, whyȝt (“breeze; wind”), 古期英語 hwiþa, hwiþu, hweoþu (“breeze”). The noun is derived from the verb.
whither (third-person singular simple present whithers, present participle whithering, simple past and past participle whithered) (British, dialectal, especially Scotland)
whither (plural whithers) (British, dialectal, especially Scotland)
![]()