sith

[sith] /sɪθ/
adverb, conjunction, preposition, Archaic.
1.
Origin
before 950; Middle English; Old English siththa, dialectal variant of siththan, orig., sīth thām after that, subsequently to that, equivalent to sīth subsequently (akin to Gothic seithus, Old Norse sīth- late, German seit since) + thām, dative of demonstrative pronoun, i.e., “to that” (see the1); compare Old Norse sīthan sith
Examples from the web for sith
  • They appear in star wars knights of the old republic ii the sith lords.
British Dictionary definitions for sith

sith

/sɪθ/
adverb, conjunction, preposition
1.
an archaic word for since
Word Origin
Old English siththa, short for siththansince
Word Origin and History for sith
adv., conj., prep.

"since" (obsolete), Middle English, reduced from Old English siððan "then, thereupon; continuously, during which; seeing that," from *sið þon "subsequent to that," from sið "after," from Proto-Germanic *sith- "later, after" (cf. Old Saxon sith "after that, since, later," German seit "since," Gothic seiþus "late"), from PIE *se- (2) "long, late" (see soiree).