remission

noun
/ɹɪˈmɪʃ(ə)n/UK/ɹəˈmɪʃ(ə)n/US

Etymology

From Middle English remissioun (“release from duty; freeing of captives; mercy, pardon, respite; forgiveness; release from or reduction of penances; reduction in intensity (of a quality, symptom, etc.); transfer of property, quitclaim; legal opinion or submission; reference, cross-reference”) [and other forms], from Anglo-Norman remission, remissione, remissioun, remissiun and Middle French, Old French remission (“forgiveness of sin; pardoning of an offence; postponement; cessation, suspension; diminishing or weakening of something; reduction of debt; reduction in intensity of a disease or symptom”) (modern French rémission), and their etymon Late Latin remissiō (“forgiveness; pardon of sins”), Latin remissiō (“release; sending back; easing off, relaxing, softening; reduction of debt; reduction in intensity of a disease or symptom”), from remittō (“to remit, send back; to diminish; to relax; to do without, forego”) + -siō. Remittō is derived from re- (prefix meaning ‘back, backwards’) + mittō (“to cause to go; to send; to discharge, emit, let go, release; to throw; to extend, reach out; to announce, tell; to produce, yield; to attend, escort, guide; to dismiss, disregard; to end”) (possibly ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *meyth₂- (“to change, exchange; to change places, go past”) or *(s)meyt- (“to throw”)). The English word is cognate with Catalan remissió, Italian remissioni, remissione (“remission; withdrawal of legal action; compliance, submission”), Old Occitan remessió, Portuguese remisson, remissão (“pardon; remission”), Spanish remisión (“remission”).

  1. derived from *mey-
  2. derived from remissiō — “release; sending back; easing off, relaxing, softening; reduction of debt; reduction in intensity of a disease or symptom
  3. derived from remissiō — “forgiveness; pardon of sins
  4. derived from remission — “forgiveness of sin; pardoning of an offence; postponement; cessation, suspension; diminishing or weakening of something; reduction of debt; reduction in intensity of a disease or symptom
  5. derived from remission
  6. inherited from remissioun — “release from duty; freeing of captives; mercy, pardon, respite; forgiveness; release from or reduction of penances; reduction in intensity (of a quality, symptom, etc.); transfer of property, quitclaim; legal opinion or submission; reference, cross-reference

Definitions

  1. A pardon of a sin

    A pardon of a sin; (chiefly historical, also figuratively) the forgiveness of an offence, or relinquishment of a (legal) claim or a debt.

  2. A lessening of amount due, as in either money or work, or intensity of a thing.

  3. An act of remitting, returning, or sending back.

  4. + 2 more definitions
    1. Reflection or back-scattering of light by a material

      Reflection or back-scattering of light by a material; (to send back)

    2. To change the mission of

      To change the mission of; to provide with a new mission.

      • The Strykers have been remissioned, actually, to a mission of road security that actually takes advantage of the mobility that they provide.
      • Their original mission was reestablished. That is what happens to people who will allow God to remission their lives through His blood cleansing them.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for remission. 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