sotilte

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Middle English[edit]

Alternative forms[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From Old French sutilté, from Latin subtīlitās; equivalent to sotil +‎ -te.

Pronunciation[edit]

  • IPA(key): /sɔtil(ə)ˈteː/, /sɔtəl(ə)ˈteː/, /sutəl(ə)ˈteː/

Noun[edit]

sotilte (plural sotiltes)

  1. Mental power or ability; smartness or cleverness:
  2. An instance of mental power or ability; a smart deed:
    1. An unfair argument that uses sophistry or subtlety.
    2. A mental exercise, trial or challenge; a test of one's mind.
    3. A strategy or solution; a hidden method or teaching.
  3. Sophistication, complexness; the state of being incomprehensible.
  4. Capability; ability in a specified domain or area.
  5. Deceiving, insidiousness; the concealment of one's true behaviour or goals.
  6. An act of deception, insidiousness or deceiving; a trick or ploy.
    • 1387–1400, Geoffrey Chaucer, “The Tale of the Chanons Yeman”, in The Canterbury Tales, Lichfield Cathedral MS. 029, leaf 175, back; republised and transcribed in Frederick J. Furnivall (editor), The Hengwrt MS of Chaucer's Canterbury tales, 1881, →OCLC, Part VI, Appendix 5, page 555, lines 839–845:
      Nay nay god woot / al be he monk of frere [/] Preest or chanon̄ / or eny other wight [/] Thougħ he sitte at his book/ [sic] boþe day and nyght [/] In learnyng of his eluissħ nyce lore [/] As is in veyne / and parde moche more [/] Is to lerne a lewed man / this sotilte [/] ffy spek not þer-of / for it wol not be
      No, no, God knows, whether he is a monk, a friar / A clergyman, a priest, or any other living being / Even if he sits at his studies day and night / Learning mysterious and pointless lore / It is all in vain, and worse than that! / To teach an uninitiated man this trick— / Ha! Don't think of it; it's impossible.
  7. An ornamental meal made to resemble a famous event.
  8. Narrowness or diminutiveness; lacking in dimensions.
  9. The quality of being fluidic or lacking viscosity.

Descendants[edit]

  • English: subtlety

References[edit]