Ought (&add;t), n. & adv. See
Aught.
Ought, imp., p. p., or auxiliary.
[Orig. the preterit of the verb to owe. OE. oughte,
aughte, ahte, AS. āhte. √110. See
Owe.] 1. Was or were under obligation to
pay; owed. [Obs.]
This due obedience which they ought to the
king.
Tyndale.
The love and duty I long have ought
you.
Spelman.
[He] said . . . you ought him a thousand
pound.
Shak.
2. Owned; possessed. [Obs.]
The knight the which that castle
ought.
Spenser.
3. To be bound in duty or by moral
obligation.
We then that are strong ought to bear the
infirmities of the weak.
Rom. xv. 1.
4. To be necessary, fit, becoming, or
expedient; to behoove; -- in this sense formerly sometimes used
impersonally or without a subject expressed. "Well ought
us work." Chaucer.
To speak of this as it ought, would ask a
volume.
Milton.
Ought not Christ to have suffered these
things?
Luke xxiv. 26.
&fist; Ought is now chiefly employed as an auxiliary verb,
expressing fitness, expediency, propriety, moral obligation, or the
like, in the action or state indicated by the principal verb.
Syn. -- Ought, Should. Both words imply
obligation, but ought is the stronger. Should may imply
merely an obligation of propriety, expendiency, etc.; ought
denotes an obligation of duty.