covenant

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Middle English covenaunt, borrowed from Old French covenant (agreement), from Latin conveniēns, convenientem (agreeing, agreeable, suitable, convenient), present participle of conveniō (to agree). Cognate with convenient and convene.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈkʌv.ən.ənt/, /ˈkʌv.nənt/
  • (file)
  • Rhymes: -ʌvənənt, -ʌvnənt

Noun

covenant (plural covenants)

  1. (law) An agreement to do or not do a particular thing.
  2. (law) A promise, incidental to a deed or contract, either express or implied.
  3. A pact or binding agreement between two or more parties.
  4. An incidental clause in an agreement.

Synonyms

Derived terms

Translations

Verb

covenant (third-person singular simple present covenants, present participle covenanting, simple past and past participle covenanted)

  1. To enter into, or promise something by, a covenant.
  2. (law) To enter a formal agreement.
  3. (law) To bind oneself in contract.
  4. (law) To make a stipulation.

Translations

Further reading

Old French

Etymology

From Latin conveniēns, conveniēntem (agreeing, agreeable, suitable, convenient), present participle of conveniō (to agree).

Verb

covenant

  1. present participle of covenir

Noun

covenant oblique singular, m (oblique plural covenanz or covenantz, nominative singular covenanz or covenantz, nominative plural covenant)

  1. covenant
    • c. 1150, Thomas d'Angleterre, Le Roman de Tristan, Champion Classiques edition, →ISBN, page 220, line 2895:
      Del convenant vus deit membrer
      You must remember the convenant

Descendants

  • English: covenant
  • French: convenant
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.