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Word of the Day

Saturday, November 07, 2009

abeyance

\uh-BAY-uhn(t)s\ , noun;
1.
Suspension; temporary cessation.
Quotes:
He was nineteen years old, and officially a medical student, though inevitably his studies were in abeyance for the duration of the war.
-- Ruth Brandon, Surreal Lives: The Surrealists 1917-1945
Her plans fell into abeyance when she parted from Franz Josef and traveled for five years.
-- Rebecca West, "Black Lamb and Grey Falcon", The Atlantic, January 1941
Origin:
Abeyance derives from Medieval French abeance, "expectation," from abeer, from a-, "to" (from Latin ad-) + baer, beer, "to gape (at)," from Late Latin batare, "to gape."
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