different between honour vs obedience

honour

English

Alternative forms

  • honor (American)

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /??n?(?)/

Noun

honour (countable and uncountable, plural honours)

  1. British spelling, Canadian spelling, South African spelling, Commonwealth of Nations, and Ireland standard spelling of honor.
    • 1902, Richard Francis Weymouth, Translation of the New Testament of the Bible, Book 60, 1 Peter 2:4:
      Come to Him, the ever-living Stone, rejected indeed by men as worthless, but in God's esteem chosen and held in honour.

Antonyms

  • dishonour

Derived terms

Related terms

Translations

Verb

honour (third-person singular simple present honours, present participle honouring, simple past and past participle honoured)

  1. British spelling, Canadian spelling, Commonwealth of Nations, and Ireland standard spelling of honor.

Derived terms

  • honour in the breach

Translations


Middle English

Etymology

Anglo-Norman honour.

Noun

honour (plural honours)

  1. honour

Descendants

  • English: honour, honor

References

p. 1, Arthur; A Short Sketch of his Life and History in English Verse of the First Half of the Fifteenth Century, Frederick Furnivall ed. EETS. Trübner & Co.: London. 1864.


Old French

Noun

honour m (oblique plural honours, nominative singular honours, nominative plural honour)

  1. Late Anglo-Norman spelling of honur
    [] prierent au roi qe mesme le cont purroit estre restorez a ses noun et honour de marquys queux il avoit pardevant.
    [] prayed to the king that even the count could be restored to his name and his honour of marquee that he had before

honour From the web:

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  • what honours degree mean
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obedience

English

Alternative forms

  • oboedience (obsolete, rare)

Etymology

From Anglo-Norman obedience, from Old French obedience (modern French obédience), from Latin oboedientia. Cognate with obeisance.

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /?(?)?bi?d??ns/

Noun

obedience (countable and uncountable, plural obediences)

  1. The quality of being obedient.
    • February 24, 1823, Thomas Jefferson, letter to Mr. Edward Everett
      Resistance to tyrants is obedience to God.
    • 1918, Edgar Rice Burroughs, The Land That Time Forgot Chapter VIII
      Cautioning Nobs to silence, and he had learned many lessons in the value of obedience since we had entered Caspak, I slunk forward, taking advantage of whatever cover I could find...
  2. The collective body of persons subject to any particular authority.
  3. A written instruction from the superior of an order to those under him.
  4. Any official position under an abbot's jurisdiction.

Synonyms

  • hearsomeness (nonce word)
  • submission

Antonyms

  • disobedience, defiance, rebellion (ignoring)
  • violation (ignoring, especially rules)
  • control, dominance (ruling)

Related terms

  • obedient
  • obeisance
  • obey

Translations

Further reading

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

Old French

Etymology

From Latin

Noun

obedience f (oblique plural obediences, nominative singular obedience, nominative plural obediences)

  1. obedience
  2. authority; influence; power

obedience From the web:

  • what obedience means
  • what obedience is not
  • what obedience to god means
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  • what obedience stands for
  • what's obedience in french
  • what's obedience in english
  • obedience what does it mean
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