nonpareil

adj
/nɒnpəˈɹeɪ(l)/UK/ˌnɑnpəˈɹɛl/US

Etymology

From Late Middle English non-parail (“unparalleled, nonpareil”) [and other forms], from Middle French nonpareille, nonpareil (“unparalleled”) (obsolete), from non- (prefix meaning ‘not’) + pareil (“alike, like, same”). Pareil is derived from Old French pareil, from Late Latin pāriculus (“equal; like; of a number: even”), from Latin pār (“equal; like; of a number: even; suitable”) + -culus (a variant of -ulus (suffix forming diminutives)). Doublet of umpire. Noun sense 4 (size of type standardized at 6-point) is usually taken to derive from the attractive type cut by the brothers Giovanni and Gregorio De Gregori (fl. 1482–1503 and 1496–1527 respectively) for their 1498 edition of the divine offices in Venice; it was for a long time the smallest-sized type in use.

  1. derived from pār — “equal; like; of a number: even; suitable
  2. derived from pāriculus — “equal; like; of a number: even
  3. derived from pareil
  4. derived from nonpareille
  5. inherited from non-parail — “unparalleled, nonpareil

Definitions

  1. Unequalled, unrivalled

    Unequalled, unrivalled; unique.

    • He informed the clerk that he would remain three or four days, inquired concerning the sailing of European steamships, and sank into the blissful inanition of the nonpareil hotel with the contented air of a traveller in his favorite inn.
    • A veritable artist, possessed of a deftness nonpareil with cotton swab and evacuation-hypo, the medical attaché is known among the shrinking upper classes of petro-Arab nations as the DeBakey of maxillofacial yeast […]
    • […]the series stars Samantha Morton as Margaret Wells, a London brothel owner; Ms. Brown Findlay as Charlotte, her older daughter and the city’s courtesan nonpareil; […]
  2. A person or thing that has no equal

    A person or thing that has no equal; a paragon.

    • My lord and master loves you. O, such love / Could be but recompens'd though you were crown'd / The nonpareil of beauty!
    • King John of France, once prisoner in England, came […] to see the Countess of Salisbury, the nonpareil of those times, and his dear mistress.
  3. The blue underwing or Clifden nonpareil (Catocala fraxini), a species of moth distributed…

    The blue underwing or Clifden nonpareil (Catocala fraxini), a species of moth distributed across the Palearctic; also (obsolete) any of a number of moths of other species.

  4. + 8 more definitions
    1. In full nonpareil parrot

      In full nonpareil parrot: an eastern rosella, of species Platycercus eximius, a rosella (parrot) native to southeastern Australia.

    2. A painted bunting (Passerina ciris), a brightly-coloured finch native to North America.

    3. In full nonpareil apple

      In full nonpareil apple: an apple tasting both sweet and tart which ripens very late in the season; also, the tree producing this fruit.

    4. Any of various types of small sweets.

    5. A small pellet of white or coloured sugar used as decoration on baked goods and candy.

    6. A small, flat chocolate drop covered with such pellets of sugar, similar to a comfit.

    7. A caper (“pickled edible flower bud”) of the smallest size.

    8. A size of type between ruby and emerald (or, in the United States, between agate and…

      A size of type between ruby and emerald (or, in the United States, between agate and minion), standardized as 6-point; (countable) a slug of this size.

      • A Handbook of Astronomy (cover, brown leather, detached, 5 plates, antique letterpress long primer, author’s footnotes nonpareil, marginal clues brevier, captions small pica).

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

A definitional loop anchored at nonpareil. Each word in the ring is defined by the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself. Scroll to it and watch.

01nonpareil02unique03unequaled04unmatched05peerless

A definitional loop anchored at nonpareil. Each word in the ring appears in the definition of the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself.

5 hops · closes at nonpareil

curated · pre-corpus. live cycle detection across the full graph is the next major milestone.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA