detrimentum

  • 51recevoir — Recevoir, Capere, Accipere, Excipere, Percipere, Recipere. Recevoir quelque dommage, Detrimentum aut damnum capere, Pati iacturam, Facere iacturam. Recevoir loyer d aucun, Auferre praemium ab aliquo. Recevoir loyer pour sa folie, Pretium ob… …

    Thresor de la langue françoyse

  • 52recouvrer — Recouvrer, act. acut. Est composé ainsi que Recuperare Latin, duquel il vient par mutation de p, en v, et syncope, et signifie remettre en sa main ce qui en a esté mis hors. Ainsi dit on, Recouvrer sa perte, Damnum sarcire. Recouvrer une ville… …

    Thresor de la langue françoyse

  • 53reparer — Reparer, act. acut. Est remettre une chose deschute et empirée en son premier estat. Cela repare bien un homme riche quand il parle bien, Bene nummatum decorat suadela, Ornatiorem efficit. Reparer son honneur, Infamiam inustam abolere,… …

    Thresor de la langue françoyse

  • 54detrimento — (Del lat. detrimentum). 1. m. Destrucción leve o parcial. 2. Pérdida, quebranto de la salud o de los intereses. 3. Daño moral …

    Diccionario de la lengua española

  • 55ter-3, terǝ- and teri-, trī- —     ter 3, terǝ and teri , trī     English meaning: to rub     Deutsche Übersetzung: “reiben; drehend reiben” (from which “drehen”), “(reibend) durchbohren”     Note: also teru : treu (extended with b, g, gh, ĝh, k, p); here ter 2 “tender” (eig …

    Proto-Indo-European etymological dictionary

  • 56detriment — ► NOUN ▪ harm or damage: she fasted to the detriment of her health. DERIVATIVES detrimental adjective detrimentally adjective. ORIGIN Latin detrimentum, from deterere wear away …

    English terms dictionary

  • 57detrimental — detriment ► NOUN ▪ harm or damage: she fasted to the detriment of her health. DERIVATIVES detrimental adjective detrimentally adjective. ORIGIN Latin detrimentum, from deterere wear away …

    English terms dictionary

  • 58detrimentally — detriment ► NOUN ▪ harm or damage: she fasted to the detriment of her health. DERIVATIVES detrimental adjective detrimentally adjective. ORIGIN Latin detrimentum, from deterere wear away …

    English terms dictionary

  • 59detriment — [15] Etymologically, detriment denotes damage caused by ‘wearing away’. The word comes via Old French from Latin dētrīmentum, a derivative of dēterere ‘wear away’ (whose past participle is the source of English detritus [18]). This was a compound …

    Word origins

  • 60detriment — [de′trə mənt] n. [ME & OFr < L detrimentum, a rubbing off, damage < detritus, pp. of deterere, to rub off, wear away < de , off, from + terere, to rub: see THROW] 1. damage; injury; harm 2. anything that causes damage or injury …

    English World dictionary