altercation
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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From Late Middle English altercacioun (“quarrelling, wrangling; argument or discussion about a controversy, debate, disputation; argument advanced during a disputation”) [and other forms],[1] from Anglo-Norman altercacion, altercacione, altercacioun, Middle French altercacion, altercation, and Old French altercation (“quarrelling, wrangling; debate, disputation; question and answer in a law court”) (modern French altercation), and from its etymon Latin altercātiōnem, the accusative singular of altercātiō (“altercation, dispute; argument, debate; question and answer in a law court”), from altercātus (“argued”) + -iō (suffix forming abstract nouns from verbs). Altercātus is the perfect active participle of altercor (“to have a discussion or difference with another, argue, dispute, quarrel, wrangle; to contend, struggle; to put questions to someone in a law court”), from alter (“the other”) (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *h₂el- (“other”)) + -icō (suffix forming regular first-conjugation verbs, sometimes with a frequentative sense)[2]
Audio (Southern England): | (file) |
altercation (countable and uncountable, plural altercations)
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