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dote
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
dote
verb
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Gloria had an old Studebaker that her doting father had given her.
▪ I was born six months later and immediately became the darling of my doting grandmother.
▪ No doubt the woman thought him a concerned, doting husband.
▪ On my advanced age, I dote.
▪ Telbis-Preis developed a secret friendship with the diplomats, who would often dote over her young son, Nicolae.
▪ This is typical of the celebrity worship sites erected by doting fans.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Dote

Dote \Dote\, n. An imbecile; a dotard.
--Halliwell.

Dote

Dote \Dote\, n. [See Dot dowry.]

  1. A marriage portion. [Obs.] See 1st Dot, n.
    --Wyatt.

  2. pl. Natural endowments. [Obs.]
    --B. Jonson.

Dote

Dote \Dote\, v. i. [imp. & p. p. Doted; p. pr. & vb. n. Doting.] [OE. doten; akin to OD. doten, D. dutten, to doze, Icel. dotta to nod from sleep, MHG. t?zen to keep still: cf. F. doter, OF. radoter (to dote, rave, talk idly or senselessly), which are from the same source.] [Written also doat.]

  1. To act foolishly. [Obs.]

    He wol make him doten anon right.
    --Chaucer.

  2. To be weak-minded, silly, or idiotic; to have the intellect impaired, especially by age, so that the mind wanders or wavers; to drivel.

    Time has made you dote, and vainly tell Of arms imagined in your lonely cell.
    --Dryden.

    He survived the use of his reason, grew infatuated, and doted long before he died.
    --South.

  3. To be excessively or foolishly fond; to love to excess; to be weakly affectionate; -- with on or upon; as, the mother dotes on her child.

    Sing, siren, for thyself, and I will dote.
    --Shak.

    What dust we dote on, when 't is man we love. -- Pope.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
dote

c.1200, "to be feeble-minded from age," from Middle Low German doten "be foolish," which is of unknown origin. Meaning "to be infatuated" is from late 15c. Related: Doted; dotes; doting.

Wiktionary
dote

n. 1 (context Ireland English) A darling, a cutie. 2 (context obsolete English) An imbecile; a dotard. vb. 1 (context intransitive usually with '''on''' English) To be excessively fond of. 2 (context intransitive archaic English) To act in a foolish manner; to be senile.

WordNet
dote
  1. v. be foolish or senile due to old age

  2. shower with love; show excessive affection for; "Grandmother dotes on her the twins"

Usage examples of "dote".

If Cai had been less doting and more vigilant, perhaps he could have found help for him earlier on.

Her ascendancy over the King was attributed to the enchantments and experiments of a Dominican friar, learned in many a cantrip and cabala, whom she entertained in her house, and who had fashioned two pictures of Edward and Alive which, when suffumigated with the incense of mysterious herbs and gums, mandrakes, sweet calamus, caryophylleae, storax, benzoin, and other plants plucked beneath the full moon what time Venus was in ascendant, caused the old King to dote upon this lovely concubine.

In five months, Gid was able to pay back only one hundred dollars, and his doting aunt stopped doting.

Miss Mahan had certainly seen her share of blindly doting parents, but this was unbelievable.

But they are all so subtle, full of art-- And age again doting and flexible, So as--I cannot tell--we may, perchance, Light on a quean may cheat us all.

Fortunately, Taglia seemed to be the kind that doted on the Fluxgirlsfortunately for Taglia, Matson thought sourly.

He and Tika shuddered in horror as Doris was fed segments of a slithering pink object by her doting partner whilst protesting that they should report this to Txala.

Jane, their mother, would have been an unfashionably doting mother, even as she had been an unfashionably devoted wife.

Certainly Benison of all Kindred, with his notorious doting on Aunt Bedelia, would understand and acquiesce.

Grandfather Benjamin doted on his sons, and wanted them to learn the button business, but Adelia had loftier aims.

Then there were the Hoovers - the ivory-white Hoovers flushed with all the benefits of a doting society, the people of intelligence and position who slid through life plucking up the breaks as they dropped in their laps - who had nothing better to do with their lives than indulge their fantasies with harebrained schemes and crackpot notions and then feel they had the legal right to inflict their sick delusions on decent, law-abiding people.

Endymion, dazzled at the outset by Charis, had fallen violently in love with her, and was behaving, as even his doting parent was obliged to own, like a mooncalf, bestowing every degree of attention upon Charis, gazing adoringly at her, positively sitting in her pocket, and showing alarming signs of trying to fix his interest with her.

Hooper said, and in his doting, overattentive way he repeated that she was new to New York and was seeing this for the first time.

A pure-bred Pomeranian everyone hated except my mom, who really doted on the little turd.

Iza should have had many children, the old man thought, she dotes so much on the ones she has.