vaillance
French
Etymology
Inherited from Old French vaillance, from vaillant + -ance, or possibly from Late Latin valentia, from Latin valēns.
Pronunciation
Audio (file) - Rhymes: -ɑ̃s
Further reading
- “vaillance”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
Old French
Alternative forms
- vaillaunce (Anglo-Norman)
- vaillancie (Anglo-Norman)
- vaillauncie (Anglo-Norman)
- valiauns (Anglo-Norman)
- valaunce (Anglo-Norman)
Noun
vaillance oblique singular, f (oblique plural vaillances, nominative singular vaillance, nominative plural vaillances)
- value; worth
- 1260–1267, Brunetto Latini, “Cist premiers livres parole de la naissance de toutes choses [This first book talks about the birth of all things]” (chapter 1), Livre I - Premiere partie, in Livres dou Tresor [Book of Treasures]; republished as Polycarpe Chabaille, compiler, Li livres dou tresor par Brunetto Latini, Paris: Imprimerie impériale, 1863, page 1:
- si come li sires qui vuet en petit leu amasser choses de grandisme vaillance […] por acroistre son pooir […] i met il les plus chieres choses et les plus precieux joiaus que il puet, selonc sa bone entencion, tout autressi est li cors de cest livre compilez de sapience
- Just like the lord, who wants to accumulate very valuable things in a tiny place […] in order to increase his power, […] puts there—according to his good intention—the dearest things and the most precious jewels he can, so the body of this book is filled with knowledge
- (literally, “Just like the lord, who wants in small place to amass things of very great value […] ”)
- valiance; chivalry; bravery
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