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Show Notes
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for January 25, 2007 is:
chivalry \SHIV-ul-ree\ noun
1 : mounted men-at-arms
2 : the system or practices of knighthood
3 : the conduct, spirit, or character of the ideal knight
Examples:
"Chivalry is not completely dead," thought Alice when the man on the subway rose to offer her his seat.
Did you know?
In days of old when knights were bold, Anglo-French speakers used the word "chevaler" (an ancestor of our word "chevalier") for a knight or horseman. By the 14th century, English speakers had adopted the slightly modified spelling "chivalry" to describe their own well-armored, mounted warriors. Nowadays, when we say that chivalry is not dead, we are alluding to the high standard of character and conduct typically associated with gallant knights. If you trace "chevaler" back to Late Latin, you'll find that it derives from "caballarius," which is also the ancestor of another term for a daring medieval gentleman-at-arms: "cavalier."
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