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trahison

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

English

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Etymology

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    Borrowed from French trahison.

    Noun

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    trahison (uncountable)

    1. (rare) Treason.
      • 2010, Christopher Hitchens, Hitch-22, Atlantic, published 2010, page 270:
        That this trahison would take a partly “multicultural” form was also something that was slowly ceasing to surprise me.
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    Anagrams

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    French

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    Etymology

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    Inherited from Old French traïson, from trair, or from Latin traditiōnem. Equivalent to trahir +‎ -on. Doublet of tradition.

    Pronunciation

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    Noun

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    trahison f (plural trahisons)

    1. treason
    2. betrayal
    3. (figuratively) pitfall

    Derived terms

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    Further reading

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    Middle French

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    Alternative forms

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    Etymology

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    From Old French traïson.

    Noun

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    trahison f (plural trahisons)

    1. treason

    Descendants

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    • French: trahison

    Norman

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    Etymology

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    From Old French traïson, from trair, or from Latin trāditiō, trāditiōnem.

    Noun

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    trahison f (plural trahisons)

    1. (Jersey) treason