corrival
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
From (deprecated template usage) [etyl] Middle French corrival, from (deprecated template usage) [etyl] Latin corrīvālis.
Noun
corrival (plural corrivals)
- A fellow rival; a competitor; a rival.
- 1598, Shakespeare, Henry IV, Part 1:
- So he that doth redeem her thence might wear
Without corrival all her dignities:
But out upon this half-facd fellowship!
- 1621, Democritus Junior [pseudonym; Robert Burton], “Iealousie, His Equivocations, Name, Definition, Extent, Seuerall Kindes, of Princes, Parents, Friends. In Beasts, Men, before Marriage, as Corriuals, or after, as in this Place”, in The Anatomy of Melancholy, […], Oxford, Oxfordshire: […] John Lichfield and Iames Short, for Henry Cripps, →OCLC, partition 3, section 3, member 1, subsection 1, pages 465–466:
- Petronius calleth this paſſion [i.e., jealousy] amantium furioſam æmulationem, a furious emulation, and their ſymptomes are well expreſſed by Sr Ieffrey Chaucer in his firſt Canterbury tale. It will make the neareſt & deareſt friends fall out; they will endure al other things to be common, goods, lands, moneyes, participate of all other pleaſures, and take in good part any diſgraces, iniuries in another kind, but as Propertius well deſcribes it in an Elegie of his, in this they will ſuffer nothing, have no corriuals.
- (archaic) A companion.
- 1598, William Shakespeare, Henry IV, Part 1
- The Prince of Wales, Lord John of Lancaster,
The noble Westmoreland, and warlike Blunt;
And many more corrivals and dear men
Of estimation and command in arms.
- The Prince of Wales, Lord John of Lancaster,
- 1598, William Shakespeare, Henry IV, Part 1
Adjective
corrival (comparative more corrival, superlative most corrival)
- Having rivaling claims; emulous; in rivalry.
- 1701, Bishop William Fleetwood, An Essay Upon Miracles
- Not thinking, perhaps, that this would be, to erect a Power equal, and corrival with that of God Almighty […]
- 1701, Bishop William Fleetwood, An Essay Upon Miracles
Verb
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- To compete with; to rival