ext_23281 (
miss-daizy.livejournal.com) wrote in
1word1day2010-02-03 11:54 am
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Wicked Wednesday
recreant
(rkr-nt)
adj.
1. Unfaithful or disloyal to a belief, duty, or cause.
2. Craven or cowardly.
n.
1. A faithless or disloyal person.
2. A coward.
Etymology
From Fr. recroire "to yield in a trial by combat, surrender allegiance," which is perhaps from "take back one's pledge, yield one's cause," from re- "again, back" + croire "entrust, believe," from L. credere.
Similar in etymology to the more commonly used "miscreant"; "mis"; wrongly and "credere"; to believe.
Usage
1642: First usage as "unfaithful to duty"
c1400. First recorded usage as a noun "one who yields in combat, coward, faint-hearted person" .
c.1300 Used adjectively to mean "confessing oneself to be overcome or vanquished," from O.Fr. recreant "yielding, giving,"
Despite his overwhelming fear the Cowardly Lion stood stalwart at Dorothy's side, proving to himself he was not quite the recreant he had always considered himself to be.
(rkr-nt)
adj.
1. Unfaithful or disloyal to a belief, duty, or cause.
2. Craven or cowardly.
n.
1. A faithless or disloyal person.
2. A coward.
Etymology
From Fr. recroire "to yield in a trial by combat, surrender allegiance," which is perhaps from "take back one's pledge, yield one's cause," from re- "again, back" + croire "entrust, believe," from L. credere.
Similar in etymology to the more commonly used "miscreant"; "mis"; wrongly and "credere"; to believe.
Usage
1642: First usage as "unfaithful to duty"
c1400. First recorded usage as a noun "one who yields in combat, coward, faint-hearted person" .
c.1300 Used adjectively to mean "confessing oneself to be overcome or vanquished," from O.Fr. recreant "yielding, giving,"
Despite his overwhelming fear the Cowardly Lion stood stalwart at Dorothy's side, proving to himself he was not quite the recreant he had always considered himself to be.