pervention
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Latin perventio, from pervenio.
Noun
[edit]pervention (plural perventions)
- (archaic) A coming or arrival; advent
- 1658, Thomas Hall, A Practical and Polemical Commentary[1]:
- yet in respect of inchoation, intention and purpose, though not in respect of pervention and full obtaining that purpose, we are called perfect.
- 1667, John Milton, Paradise Lost[2]:
- So pondering, and from his armed peers / Forth stepping opposite, half way he met / His daring foe, at this pervention more / Incens'd, and thus securely him defy'd.