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- VILLAIN Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
Middle English vilain, vilein, from Anglo-French, from Medieval Latin villanus, from Latin villa First Known Use 14th century, in the meaning defined at sense 4
- vilain - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
vilain (feminine vilaine, masculine plural vilains, feminine plural vilaines) ugly Synonyms: laid, moche Antonyms: beau, joli une vilaine couleur ― an ugly color une vilaine voix ― an ugly voice; disagreeable, awful Il fait vilain ― The weather is awful La curiosité est un vilain défaut ― Curiosity killed the cat naughty Synonym
- Villain - Wikipedia
The landed aristocracy of mediaeval Europe used politically and linguistically the Middle English descendant of villanus meaning "villager" (styled as vilain or vilein) with the meaning "a person of uncouth mind and manners"
- VILLAIN | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
VILLAIN definition: 1 a bad person who harms other people or breaks the law: 2 a criminal: 3 a character in a… Learn more
- VILLAIN Definition Meaning | Dictionary. com
First recorded in 1275–1325; Middle English vilein, vilain “churlish rustic, serf,” from Middle French, from Vulgar Latin and Medieval Latin villānus “a farm servant, farmhand”; villa, -an
- Villain - definition of villain by The Free Dictionary
vil·lain (vĭl′ən) n 1 A wicked or evil person; a scoundrel 2 A dramatic or fictional character who is typically at odds with the hero 3 (also vĭl′ān′, vĭ-lān′) Variant of villein 4 Something said to be the cause of particular trouble or an evil: poverty, the villain in the increase of crime 5 Obsolete A peasant regarded as vile
- Définitions : vilain - Dictionnaire de français Larousse
Qui n'est pas gentil (en particulier dans le langage des enfants) : Un vilain monsieur
- What does VILLAIN mean? - Definitions. net
Etymology: Probably villein, from villain (modern: vilain), in turn from Late, meaning serf or peasant, someone who is bound to the soil of a villa, which is to say, worked on the equivalent of a plantation in late Antiquity, in Italy or Gaul
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