Wield
name, noun, verb ·Moderate ·College level
Definitions
- 1 Rule, command; power, control, wielding. countable, uncountable
"What boots it if I beat the heathen home, And fold the mountains in my wield, and fire […]"
- 1 To handle with skill and ease, especially a weapon or tool.
- 2 handle effectively wordnet
- 3 To exercise (authority or influence) effectively.
"The question isn't whether AI will reshape human society—it's whether its engineers will wield that power thoughtfully."
- 4 have and exercise wordnet
- 5 To command, rule over; to possess or own. obsolete
"There was never kyng sauff myselff that welded evir such knyghtes."
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- 6 To control, to guide or manage. obsolete
"With such his chearefull speaches he doth wield / Her mind so well, that to his will she bends[…]."
- 7 To carry out, to bring about. obsolete
"All is weill done, God wate, weild he hys will."
- 1 Acronym of Western Institute for Endangered Language Documentation. abbreviation, acronym, alt-of
Example
More examples"It is dangerous to wield an edged tool in such a way."
Etymology
From Middle English welden, from the merger of Old English wealdan (“to control, rule”) (strong class 7) and Old English wieldan (“to control, subdue”) (weak). Both verbs derive from Proto-West Germanic *waldan and *waldijan, respectively; and are ultimately from Proto-Germanic *waldaną (“to rule”). The reason for the merger was that in Middle English the -d in the stem made it hard to distinguish between strong and weak forms in the past tense.
From Middle English welde, from Old English *wield, ġewield (“power, control, dominion”), from Proto-West Germanic *waldi, from Proto-Germanic *waldiz (“power, might, control”).
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Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.