3 definitions found

From WordNet (r) 2.0 [wn]:

thither

adverb: to or toward that place; away from the speaker; "go there around noon!" [syn: {there}] [ant: {here}]

From The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.44 [gcide]:

Thither \Thith"er\, adjective

1. Being on the farther side from the person speaking; farther; -- a correlative of hither; as, on the thither side of the water. --W. D. Howells.

2. Applied to time: On the thither side of, older than; of more years than. See {Hither}, adjective --Huxley.

From The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.44 [gcide]:

Thither \Thith"er\, adverb [OE. thider, AS. [eth]ider; akin to E. that; cf. Icel. [thorn]a[eth]ra there, Goth. [thorn]a[thorn]r[=o] thence. See {That}, and {The}.]

1. To that place; -- opposed to {hither}.

This city is near; . . . O, let me escape thither. --Gen. xix. 20.

Where I am, thither ye can not come. --John vii. 34.

2. To that point, end, or result; as, the argument tended thither.

{Hither and thither}, to this place and to that; one way and another.

Syn: There.

Usage: {Thither}, {There}. Thither properly denotes motion toward a place; there denotes rest in a place; as, I am going thither, and shall meet you there. But thither has now become obsolete, except in poetry, or a style purposely conformed to the past, and there is now used in both senses; as, I shall go there to-morrow; we shall go there together.
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