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accuraments

by Prof. Madelyn Hamill Published 3 years ago Updated 3 years ago

Is it accoutrement or accouterment?

Accoutrement and its relative accoutre, a verb meaning "to provide with equipment or furnishings" or "to outfit," have been appearing in English texts since the 16th century. Today both words have variant spellings— accouterment and accouter.

What does accrued mean in legal terms?

To come into existence as a claim that is legally enforceable. To accumulate over time: I have accrued 15 days of sick leave. [Middle English acreuen, from Old French acreu, past participle of acroistre, to increase, add, from Latin accrēscere, to grow : ad-, ad- + crēscere, to arise; see ker- in Indo-European roots .]

What does it mean to accrue experience?

To increase, accumulate, or come about as a result of growth: common sense that accrues with experience. 3. To come into existence as a claim that is legally enforceable. To accumulate over time: I have accrued 15 days of sick leave.

What is an accoutrement?

Definition of accoutrement. 1 a : equipment, trappings specifically : a soldier's outfit usually not including clothes and weapons —usually used in plural.

What does "accouterment" mean?

Accoutrement and its relative "accoutre," a verb meaning "to provide with equipment or furnishings" or "to outfit," have been appearing in English texts since the 16th century. Today both words have variant spellings - "accouterment" and "accouter." Their French ancestor, accoutrer, descends from an Old French word meaning "seam" and ultimately traces to the Latin word consuere, meaning "to sew together." You probably won’t be too surprised to learn that "consuere" is also an ancestor of couture, meaning "the business of designing fashionable custom-made women's clothing."

Examples of accrue in a Sentence

Recent Examples on the Web The benefit of raising the limit to $80,000, as proposed in the House version of the Build Back Better Act, would accrue to taxpayers like relocating financiers. — Marie Sapirie, Forbes, 18 Jan. 2022 Post-judgment interest will accrue at 5 percent a year until the amount is paid.

History and Etymology for accrue

Middle English acrewen, acruwen, probably borrowed from Anglo-French *acreue "increase," noun derivative from feminine of acreu, past participle of acreistre "to increase, grow," going back to Latin accrēscere, from ad- ad- + crēscere "to grow" — more at crescent entry 1

Legal Definition of accrue

Note: Statutes of limitations begin to run when a cause of action accrues.

OTHER WORDS FROM accrue

ac·cru·a·ble, adjective ac·crue·ment, noun non·ac·cru·ing, adjective su·per·ac·crue, verb (used without object), su·per·ac·crued, su·per·ac·cru·ing.

How to use accrue in a sentence

Since these benefits could start accruing a few weeks after residents in a facility are fully immunized, “I would recommend the vaccine for a 97-year-old with significant dementia,” Uy said.

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