Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary · 1913

Adaw

Adaw ({not transcribed}) , transitive verb

[Compare Old English adawe of dawe, Anglo-Saxon of dagum from days, i. e., from life, out of life.]

To subdue; to daunt. [Obsolete]
The sight whereof did greatly him adaw. — Spenser

Adaw , verb, transitive and intransitive

[Old English adawen to wake; pref. a- (compare Gothic us-, German er-) + dawen, dagon, to dawn. See Daw.]

To awaken; to arouse. [Obsolete]
A man that waketh of his sleep He may not suddenly well taken keep Upon a thing, ne seen it parfitly Till that he be adawed verily. — Chaucer