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Hither is an old Kentucky word for over there. It's spelled hither.
Thither is not an Old English word. It merely means "there" in Modern English as in hither and thither, "here and there".
There is no word that rhymes with slither and means fast. The closest word is hither, which means come here. The rest are not related to movement directly at all.
No, "hither" is not a preposition. "Hither" is an adverb that means "to this place" or "to here."
Hither itself is already unscrambled.
yo,hi,γεια,salut,bonjour,hé,Salut, il
'hither' means 'to or toward this place' Thus a sentence using 'hither' could be:- There are blueberries ripe in the woods, go hither and gather them for me.
Come hither child was created in 1839.
Absolutely nothing. You were doing fine until the word "naught". "Thou comest" is the singular form of "you come" which is now somewhat obsolete. Reversing the order into "comest thou" makes it a question, as "Are you coming" is the question form of "You are coming". "Hither" means "toward here" or "toward me", although the direction is already implied by the use of the word "come". Thus "Comest thou hither" means the same as "Are you coming here" which is all well and good. But the word "naught" means "nothing", so "Comest thou hither naught" means "Are you coming here nothing." which means . . . naught.
Hither Green railway station was created in 1895.
As an adverb "hither" means "to or toward this place". As an adjective it means "located on the near side."