desuetude etymology - Axtarish в Google
4 авг. 2018 г. · desuetude (n.) "discontinuance of use, practice, custom, or fashion," mid-15c., from Latin desuetudo "disuse," from desuetus, ...
Etymology ; dissuetude · discontinuance of a practice, disuse ·, from Middle French ; désuétude · obsolescence · (modern French désuétude), from Latin ; dēsuētūdo ...
Desuetude comes from suescere, a word that means "to become accustomed" (suescere also gave us the word custom). Disuse descends from uti, which means "to use. ...
In law, desuetude (/dɪˈsjuːɪtjuːd, ˈdɛswɪ-/; from French désuétude, from Latin desuetudo 'outdated, no longer custom') is a doctrine that causes statutes, ...
First recorded in 1425–75; late Middle English, from Latin dēsuētūdo, equivalent to dēsuē-, base of dēsuēscere “to become disaccustomed to, unlearn” ( dē- ...
Learned borrowing from Latin dēsuētūdō (“disuse”). Pronunciation. edit · IPA: /de.zɥe.tyd/ ...
There are two ways to correctly pronounce desuetude: "DES-wuh-tude" or "de-SUE-uh-tude." It comes from Latin: de- means "away, from" and suescere means "become ...
OED's earliest evidence for desuetude is from 1623, in the writing of Henry Cockeram, lexicographer. desuetude is a borrowing from French.
Desuetude comes from French désuétude, a borrowing of Latin dēsuētūdo “disuse,” a derivative of the verb dēsuēscere “to lay aside a habit or custom” and the ...
[1425–75; late ME ‹ L dēsuētūdo, equiv. to dēsuē-, base of dēsuēscere to become disaccustomed to, unlearn (dē- de- + suēscere to become accustomed to) + ...
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