quietus
noun/kwaɪˈiːtəs/
Etymology
Short for Medieval Latin quiētus est (literally “he is quiet”). First attested in the 1530s. Earlier attested as Late Middle English quietus est. Doublet of coy, quiet, quit, and quite.
- learned borrowing from quiētus est
Definitions
A stillness or pause
A stillness or pause; something that quiets or represses; removal from activity.
- Olive's specific terrors and dangers had by this time very much blown over; Basil Ransom had given no sign of life for ages, and Henry Burrage had certainly got his quietus before they went to Europe.
- The very unromantically accoutred form of a keen-visaged, middle-aged female, padding heavily in bedroom slippers along the garden walk, gave its quietus to the situation.
Death.
- When he himſelfe might his Quietus make / With a bare Bodkin?
- After a good deal of firing, and lying in wait - for every time he heard a shot down he'd go, and on coming to the surface, would only expose about two or three inches of his nose to fire at - we managed to give him his quietus.
Final settlement (e.g., of a debt).
The neighborhood
- neighborquiescence
- neighborquiet
- neighborquietude
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for quietus. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA