to care for and feed (cattle or horses) for payment
2.
to assess and charge (land or its owner) with a public burden, such as a tax
Word origin
C14: from Old French agister, from gister to lodge, ultimately from Latin jacēre to lie down
agist in American English
(əˈdʒɪst)
transitive verb
to feed or pasture (livestock) for a fee
Derived forms
agister
agistor
noun
Word origin
[1590–1600; ‹ AF, MF agister to give lodgings to, equiv. to a-a-5 + gister to lodge, lie ‹ Gmc; cf. OE giestian to lodge, deriv. of giestguest]This word is first recorded in the period 1590–1600. Other words that entered Englishat around the same time include: jolt, mission, radius, squeeze, volunteer