| v.  vis·it·ed, vis·it·ing, vis·its  v.tr. 1.  a.  To go to see or spend time with (someone); call on socially: visit friends. b.  To go to see in order to aid or console: visit the sick and dying. c.  To stay with (someone) as a guest. d.  To go to see in an official or professional capacity: visited the dentist; a priest visiting his parishioners. 2.  a.  To go to see or spend time at (a place) with a certain intent: visit a museum; visited London. b.  To access (a website). 3.  To occur to or occupy the mind of: was visited by a bizarre thought. 4.  To consider or discuss: Has she visited that topic on her blog? 5.  a.  To afflict or assail: A plague visited the village. b.  To inflict or impose: In the Bible, God visits his wrath on the sinful. c.  Archaic   To inflict punishment on or for; avenge: The sins of the ancestors were visited on their descendants. v.intr. 1.  To make a visit. 2.  Informal   To converse or chat: Stay and visit with me for a while. n. 1.  The act or an instance of visiting a person or place. 2.  A stay or sojourn as a guest. [Middle English visiten, from Old French visiter, from Latin vīsitāre, frequentative of vīsere, to want to see, go to see, from vidēre, to see; see  weid- in the Appendix of Indo-European roots.] | 
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