Oh honey, a come hither motion is like waving a magic wand to summon someone over with a seductive flair. It's a gesture that says, "Hey there, come closer, I've got something special for you." So, if you want to reel someone in like a smooth operator, just give 'em the ol' come hither motion and watch the magic happen.
'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.
hither and thither means to and fro back and forth round and round side to side
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Hither is one of a set of three adverbs which are all about directionality. They correspond to three words which are about location: where, here and there. If an object is located near the speaker, it is "here"; if it is further away, it is "there", and if we don't know its location we have an interrogative "where". If something is in motion but it is headed towards "here" it is coming hither; if it is headed towards "there", it is going thither, and if we need to know in what direction it is going, we ask whither it is going. Please note that the three prefixes h-, th- and wh- have the same relation to each other whether the ending is -ere or -ither. Use of these words has declined over the years, probably because we are able to get the information we need from the verb used without the delicate distinction which these words represent. Shakespeare uses all of these, and frequently. In Romeo and Juliet, Romeo asks "A fair assembly: whither should they come?" In Othello, the Duke says "Fetch Desdemona hither" "Conduct me thither" says the Princess in Love's Labour's lost.
From a song in the motion picture "Mary Poppins" (1964), which starred Julie Andrews and Dick Van Dyke.
The come-hither motion, also known as the "beckoning gesture," is a hand movement where the index finger curls towards the palm in a gesture that typically signifies someone beckoning or calling someone closer. It is commonly used to signal to someone to come or follow.
Come hither child was created in 1839.
To this place; -- used with verbs signifying motion, and implying motion toward the speaker; correlate of hence and thither; as, to come or bring hither., To this point, source, conclusion, design, etc.; -- in a sense not physical., Being on the side next or toward the person speaking; nearer; -- correlate of thither and farther; as, on the hither side of a hill., Applied to time: On the hither side of, younger than; of fewer years than.
come hither, is like come here. maybe that helps?
'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.
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No, hither is an adverb, meaning to or towards this place.
Hither is an old Kentucky word for over there. It's spelled hither.
Assuming you're a girl(?) slide one or two fingers inside the vagina and stroke in a 'come hither' motion, you should feel a walnut-sized gland at the top a couple of cm in :)
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.
Hither itself is already unscrambled.