honour - Wiktionary, the free dictionary (original) (raw)

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

honour (countable and uncountable, plural honours)

  1. British, Canadian, Commonwealth, and Ireland standard spelling of honor.
    Honours are normally awarded twice a year: on The Queen's Birthday in June and at the New Year.
    • 1523, Anthony Fitzherbert, Book of Surveying:
      The lorde of the honour or manour
    • 1852, Alfred Tennyson, “Stanza X”, in Ode on the Death of the Duke of Wellington, London: Edward Moxon, […], →OCLC, page 14:
      And when the long-illumined cities flame, / Their ever-loyal iron leader's fame, / With honour, honour, honour, honour to him, / Eternal honour to his name.
    • 2019 July 1, “A Game of Flies: naming 230 new species”, in CSIRO[1], archived from the original on 4 December 2023:
      Prosopochrysa lemannae is a tiny soldier fly from Judbarra National Park in the Northern Territory. It was named in honour of his colleague Cate Lemann, by Bry the Fly Guy (aka Dr Bryan Lessard), an entomologist at our insect collection.

honour (third-person singular simple present honours, present participle honouring, simple past and past participle honoured)

  1. British, Canadian, Commonwealth, and Ireland standard spelling of honor.

honour

  1. British, Canadian, Commonwealth, and Ireland standard spelling of honor.

Borrowed from Anglo-Norman honour.

honour (plural honours)

  1. honour

p. 1, Arthur; A Short Sketch of his Life and History in English Verse of the First Half of the Fifteenth Century, Frederick Furnivall ed. EETS. Trübner & Co.: London. 1864.

honour oblique singular, m (oblique plural honours, nominative singular honours, nominative plural **honour)

  1. Late Anglo-Norman spelling of honur
    […] prierent au roi qe mesme le cont purroit estre restorez a ses noun et honour de marquys queux il avoit pardevant.
    […] prayed to the king that even the count could be restored to his name and his honour of marquee that he had before