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richesse

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

English

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Etymology

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From Middle English richesse, from Old French richese, richece.

Noun

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richesse (usually uncountable, plural richesses)

  1. (archaic) wealth or riches
  2. (countable, collective) A group of martens; the collective noun for martens.

French

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Etymology

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    Inherited from Old French richesce. By surface analysis, riche +‎ -esse.

    Pronunciation

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    Noun

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    richesse f (plural richesses)

    1. wealth
    2. (literally and figuratively) richness

    Further reading

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    Anagrams

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    Middle English

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    Alternative forms

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    Etymology

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    Borrowed from Old French richesce, richesse, from riche (rich). Some forms are reinterpreted as the plural of riche (rich).

    Pronunciation

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    • IPA(key): /riˈt͡ʃɛs(ə)/, /ˈrit͡ʃɛs(ə)/

    Noun

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    richesse (plural richesses)

    1. Wealth, lucre, valuables:
      1. (collective) Riches, valuables; precious goods.
      2. (in the plural, religion) (Earthly or heavenly) riches.
      3. Opulence, splendour; visible wealth.
    2. Profusion, abundance; the state of being prosperous or plentiful.
    3. (collective) Fine ornaments or adornments; ornamentation.
    4. (rare) Value, worthiness.

    Descendants

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    • English: riches (remodelled as a plural of rich); richesse
    • Scots: riches (remodelled as a plural of rich)
    • Yola: reeches (remodelled as a plural of reeche)

    References

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    Norman

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    Noun

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    richesse f (plural richesses)

    1. wealth

    Old French

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    Noun

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    richesse oblique singularf (oblique plural richesses, nominative singular richesse, nominative plural richesses)

    1. alternative form of richesce