custume
Old French
Etymology
PIE word |
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*ḱóm |
PIE word |
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*swé |
From coustume, from Vulgar Latin *cōnsuētūmen or *costūmen, from Latin cōnsuētūdinem, accusative singular of cōnsuētūdō (“custom, habit”), from cōnsuēscō (“accustom, habituate”), from con- (“with”) + suēscō (“become used or accustomed to”). First element con- derives from cum, from Old Latin com, from Proto-Italic *kom, from Proto-Indo-European *ḱóm (“with, along”). Second element suēscō is from Proto-Indo-European *swe-dʰh₁-sk-, from *swé (“self”) + *dʰeh₁- (“to put, place, set”); related to Latin suus (“one's own, his own”).
Noun
custume oblique singular, f (oblique plural custumes, nominative singular custume, nominative plural custumes)
- (Anglo-Norman) custom; tradition
- c. 1250, Marie de France, Yonec:
- […] il i alast od ses amis, a la custume del païs
- He went there with his friends, according to the traditions of the land
Portuguese
Noun
custume m (plural custumes)
- Obsolete spelling of costume, nowadays an eye dialect or a misspelling
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