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He also noted that the full Oxford English Dictionary has citations for "freight" as a verb going back to the 16th century.
In Middle English, fraught (an etymological cousin of freight) was a verb meaning "to load (a ship)," and the identical form could serve as a past participle meaning "laden (with)." While the verb dropped out of the language almost entirely, the past participle stuck around, typically followed by "with" and an object -- often a burden, whether real or figurative.
"Undance" has all the requisite conceptual freight, originating with a text by Mr. Wallinger, who took inspiration from Muybridge and Richard Serra's 1967-68 "Verb List".
Freight Receipt.
No freight!
J. Verb.
— travels via air freight".
All freight is searched.
Rail freight increased, too.
It hauled freight.
The verb.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com