The Collaborative International Dictionary
Kithe \Kithe\ (k[imac][th]), v. t. [Obs.]
See Kythe.
--Chaucer.
Kythe \Kythe\, Kithe \Kithe\ (k[imac][th]), v. t. [imp. Kydde, Kidde (k[i^]d"de); p. p. Kythed, Kid; p. pr. & vb. n. Kything.] [OE. kythen, kithen, cu[eth]en, to make known, AS. c[=y][eth]an, fr. c[=u][eth] known. [root]45. See Uncouth, Can to be able, and cf. Kith.] To make known; to manifest; to show; to declare. [Obs. or Scot.]
For gentle hearte kytheth gentilesse.
--Chaucer.
Wiktionary
vb. (context archaic except in Scots English) To make known; to reveal.
Usage examples of "kithe".
To move quickly among the data pools, one must be able to kithe information encoded as symbols.
The message written into the glowing air of the meditation room, as he saw when he finally kithed it, proved to be quite simple.
For a moment, he hoped that he had kithed ideoplasts wrongly, and so he stared at the glittering glyphs until his eyes burned and there could be no mistaking their meaning.
As Danlo focused his deep blue eyes on the changing ideoplasts, he kithed part of the history of this war between the gods.
With his eyes only, he played over the ideoplasts, slowly kithing them, much as he might read ancient Chinese characters or the letters of an unfamiliar alien language written into a book.
Compared to the sublime art of kithing ideoplasts, it was like trudging along on snowshoes across the frozen sea when one might sail a hundred miles per hour in an ice schooner.