From Middle English that, from Old English þæt (“the, that”, neuter definite article and relative pronoun), from Proto-Germanic *þat. Compare Saterland Frisian dät, West Frisian dat, Dutch dat, Low German dat, German dass and das, Danish det, Swedish det, Icelandic það. (stressed) enPR: thăt.
(stressed) enPR: ănd, ĕnd IPA(key): /ænd/, /ɛnd/. Rhymes: -ænd, -ɛnd. (unstressed) enPR: ən(d) IPA(key): /(ə)n(d)/, /ɛn(d)/. (unstressed or, for some speakers, stressed) Homophone: end. From Middle English and, an, from Old English and, ond, end (“and”), from Proto-Germanic *andi, *anþi, *undi...
en. English. The name of the letter comes from Latin en. The typographic sense dates to 1793. (UK, US) enPR: ĕn, IPA(key): /ɛn/. Rhymes: -ɛn. (pin–pen merger) IPA(key): /ɪn/. Homophones: in, inn. en (plural ens). The name of the Latin-script letter N/n.
From Middle English with, from Old English wiþ (“against, opposite, toward”), a shortened form of wiþer, from Proto-Germanic *wiþr- (“against”), from Proto-Indo-European *wi-tero- (“more apart”); from Proto-Indo-European *wi (“separation”).
French zeste, from Ancient Greek σχιστός (skhistós), from σχίζω (skhízō). IPA(key): /zɛst/. Rhymes: -ɛst. zest (countable and uncountable, plural zests). The outer skin of a citrus fruit, used as a flavouring or garnish.