different between delinquency vs relict

delinquency

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Late Latin d?linquentia, derived from Latin d?linqu?ns, present participle of d?linqu? (I transgress, err).

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /d??l??kw?nsi/

Noun

delinquency (countable and uncountable, plural delinquencies)

  1. Misconduct.
  2. A criminal offense.
  3. A debt that is overdue for payment.

Derived terms

  • juvenile delinquency

Translations

delinquency From the web:

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relict

English

Etymology

From Latin relictus, past participle of relinqu? (I abandon, I relinquish, I leave (behind)), from re- + linqu? (I leave, quit, forsake, depart from).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /???l?kt/

Noun

relict (plural relicts)

  1. (formal) Something that, or someone who, survives or remains or is left over after the loss of others; a relic.
    1. (archaic) The surviving member of a married couple after one or the other has died; a widow or widower.
      • 1801, in the Reports of cases decided in the High court of Chancery of Maryland, volume 3, page 268:
        Upon which the Chancellor, by way of note said, 'it is suggested, that there is a relict of the deceased, married to another man, who has joined her in a power of attorney to authorize the sale of her interest, [] '
      • 1973, Patrick O'Brian, HMS Surprise:
        But I am not the penniless nonentity I was when we first met; I can offer an honorable if not a brilliant marriage; and at the very lowest I can provide my wife – my widow, my relict – with a decent competence, an assured future.
    2. (biology, ecology) A species, organism, or ecosystem which has survived from a previous age: one which was once widespread but which is now found only in a few areas.
      • 2010, M. Zimmerman et al., in Relict Species: Phylogeography and Conservation Biology (edited by Jan Christian Habel, Thorsten Assmann), page 324:
        The species may be a relict of former stages of historical vegetation and landscape development resulting from past climate changes (glacial and post- glacial periods).
    3. (geology) A structure or other feature that has survived from a previous age.
      • 2011, Mark Keiter, Chris Ballhaus, Frank Tomaschek, A New Geological Map of the Island of Syros (Aegean Sea, Greece), page 16:
        Dark rims around the pillows are caused by glaucophane enrichment, possibly a relict of a primary interaction between basalt and seawater, causing Na- enrichment in the original glass crust of the pillows.
    4. (linguistics) A survival of an archaic word, language or other form.
      A small number of linguists believe that Cimbrian is not an Austro-Bavarian dialect but a relict of Lombardic.
Translations

Adjective

relict (not comparable)

  1. Surviving, remaining.
  2. That is a relict; pertaining to a relict.
    • 1992, Cormac McCarthy, All the Pretty Horses, page 97:
      In the lakes and in the streams were species of fish not known elsewhere on earth and birds and lizards and other forms of life as well all long relict here for the desert stretched away on every side.

Related terms

  • delict
  • delinquency
  • delinquent
  • derelict
  • relic
  • relinquish
  • reliquary

Further reading

  • relict in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
  • relict in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.
  • relict at OneLook Dictionary Search

relict From the web:

  • relict meaning
  • what relicta mean
  • relict what does it mean
  • what is reliction in real estate
  • what is relict mountain
  • what does relict mean on a tombstone
  • what are relicts witcher 3
  • what are relict cliffs
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