retardment

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Compare Middle French and French retardement.

Noun[edit]

retardment (countable and uncountable, plural retardments)

  1. Retardation; the act of retarding or delaying.
    • 1653, François Rabelais, translated by Thomas Urquhart, Gargantua and Pantagruel:
      And when he saw that all the dogs were flocking about her, yarring at the retardment of their access to her, and every way keeping such a coil with her as they are wont to do about a proud or salt bitch, he forthwith departed []
    • 1653, Henry Cogan, The voyages and adventures of Fernand Mendez Pinto, volume 3, translation of original by Fernão Mendes Pinto, published 1645:
      And forasmuch as his return hath been longer then I looked for, I have sent thus expressly to know both of him, and of you, the cause of this retardment of his.
    • 1920, William Cecil Pendleton, History of Tazewell county and southwest Virginia: 1748-1920, page 657:
      Despite the retardments occasioned by the war, and the heavy financial loss suffered from the freeing of 1200 slaves in Tazewell, the wealth of the county was not seriously impaired.

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