It is the old English form of 'Gives.'
First It Giveth was created in 2002.
ETH -- "The Lord giveth, the Lord taketh." ETH -- "The Lord giveth, the Lord taketh."
Everymanis the speaker of this line.
Wheeler School's motto is 'The Spirit Giveth Life'.
Some examples of insurance jokes are: "The bold print giveth and the fine prints giveth away", "If irreverent priests are defrocked, and dishonest lawyers are disbarred, shouldn't difficult actuaries be deactivated.
The King giveth and the King taketh away.
Technically speaking, yes - 'Giveth' is a word. However, it is an Old English word and rarely used nowadays - much like 'thee', 'thou', 'thy', 'taketh', etcetera. So, yes... It is a word, just not a modern or commonly used one.
The proper quote is 'God giveth life and God taketh life away'. This means that God gives us life and he decides when it is time for our lives to come to an end, when he feels it is best. This quote is used often in ethical discussions involving Christianity and religion. For example, in conversations about euthanasia (mercy killing), this quote can be used to demonstrate that euthanasia is not right in the eyes of the lord becuase it is he that decides when we die.
The motto of Colchester County High School is 'Wisdom Giveth Life'.
First Baptist Church of Manila's motto is 'God's Word-The Bible-Giveth Light'.
"Thou" means you (singular). "Dost" means do or does. "Giveth" means give or gives. This makes the phrase translate into modern English as "For you gain equal to what you give," which means you get what you put into it. Another way of saying this is TANSTAAFL, or There Ain't No Such Thing As A Free Lunch. Whatever effort, time, money, whatever that you put into a project or situation, you will get similar results back out of it. If you put no effort into something, then you will get nothing back; if you put a lot of effort in, then you will get large results.
Ps:37:21: The wicked borroweth, and payeth not again: but the righteous sheweth mercy, and giveth.