Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary · 1913

Dight

Dight (dīt) , transitive verb

[Old French dihten, Anglo-Saxon dihtan to dictate, command, dispose, arrange, from Latin dictare to say often, dictate, order; compare German dichten to write poetry, from Latin dictare. See Dictate.]

1.
To prepare; to put in order; hence, to dress, or put on; to array; to adorn. [Archaic] — Chaucer
She gan the house to dight. — dight
Two harmless turtles, dight for sacrifice. — Fairfax
The clouds in thousand liveries dight. — Milton
2.
To have sexual intercourse with. [Obsolete] — Chaucer