Nait
Origin 1
From Middle English naiten, nayten, from Old Norse neita, later variant of Old Norse nÃta ("to deny, refuse"), from Proto-Germanic *niitjanÄ… ("to say 'no', deny, refuse"), from Proto-Germanic *ne ("no, not"). Cognate with Icelandic neita ("to deny"), Danish nægte ("to deny"), Old English nÇ£tan ("to annoy, afflict, press upon, trample upon, crush, subdue, injure, destroy"). More at nyte, nay.
Origin 2
From Middle English naiten, nayten, from Old Norse neyta ("to use, employ"), from Proto-Germanic *nautijaną ("to use"), from Proto-Indo-European *newd- ("to acquire, make use of"). Cognate with Icelandic neyta ("to make use of, employ"). Related also to Icelandic nýta ("to use, make use of"), Old English nēotan ("to use, make use of, have the use of, have the benefit of, enjoy, employ"). More at note.
Verb
Origin 3
From Middle English naite, from Old Norse neyte, neyti ("use"), from Proto-Germanic *nautiz ("use").
Alternative forms
Noun
nait
(plural naits)Origin 4
From Middle English nait, nayt, from Old Norse neytr ("in good order, fit, fit for use"), from Proto-Germanic *nautiz ("useful, helpful"). Compare Old English nyttol ("useful").