fiendship

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English

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Etymology

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From Middle English feondscipe, from Old English fēondsċiepe, from Proto-West Germanic *fijandskapi, equivalent to fiend +‎ -ship.

Noun

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fiendship (uncountable)

  1. The state, quality, or condition of being a fiend.
    Synonym: fiendhood
    • 1849, Sidney Smith, The Mother Country, page 118:
      Nay, perhaps, mankind being possessed of a given quantity of devil, it is doubtful whether to check its fiendship in its straightforward course, but drives it to break out unnaturally in another place.
    • 1978, Mediaevalia, volumes 3-4, page 222:
      But more than these individual points of comparision[sic] makes brothers in fiendship the Devils of poem and plays.