WIST
Knew; the past tense, from an obsolete present wis, Exo 16:15 . Wot and wotteth, meaning know and knoweth, Gen 21:26 39:8, and to wit, meaning to know, Gen 24:21, are also from the same Saxon root. “Do you to wit,” 2Co 8:1, means, make you to know, or inform you. “To wit,” in 2Co 5:19, means, that is to say.
Fuente: American Tract Society Bible Dictionary
Wist
WIST.See Wit.
Fuente: Hastings’ Dictionary of the Bible
Wist
“to know,” in the pluperfect tense (with imperfect meaning) is rendered “wist” (the past tense of the verb “to wit:” cp. WOT) in Mar 9:6; Mar 14:40; Luk 2:49; Joh 5:13; Act 12:9; Act 23:5. See KNOW, No. 2.