assuetude
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See also: assuétude
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Latin assuetudo, from assuetus (“accustomed”).
Pronunciation
[edit]- IPA(key): /ˈæ.swɪˌtjuːd/
- (General American) /ˈæ.swəˌtud/
- Rhymes: -æswɪtjuːd
Noun
[edit]assuetude (countable and uncountable, plural assuetudes)
- (archaic) Accustomedness; habit.
- 1627 (indicated as 1626), Francis [Bacon], “(please specify the page, or |century=I to X)”, in Sylua Syluarum: Or A Naturall Historie. In Ten Centuries. […], London: […] William Rawley […]; [p]rinted by J[ohn] H[aviland] for William Lee […], →OCLC:
- Assuetude of things hurtful doth make them lose their force to hurt.
- The condition of an organism that has acquired tolerance of a drug or poison.
- 1836, Frederick Marryat, The Pirate, Chapter VII:
- The boy had been his companion for years: and from assuetude had become, as it were, a part of himself.
- 1896, Matthew Phipps Shiel, Vaila:
- My flesh writhed like the glutinous flesh of a serpent. Slowly moved, and stopped: -- then was a sweep -- and a swirl -- and a pause! then a swirl -- and a sweep -- and a pause! -- then steady industry of labour on the monstrous brazen axis, as the husbandman plods by the plough; then increase of zest, assuetude of a fledgeling to the wing -- then intensity -- then the last light ecstasy of flight.
Derived terms
[edit]References
[edit]- “assuetude”, in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: G. & C. Merriam, 1913, →OCLC.