content
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Middle English contenten (“to satisfy”), from Latin contentus (“contained; satisfied”), past participle of continēre (“to contain”).
content (comparative more content or contenter, superlative most content)
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content (uncountable)
content
content (third-person singular simple present contents, present participle contenting, simple past and past participle contented)
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From Middle English content (plural contentes, contence), from Latin contentus, past participle of continēre (“to hold in, contain”), as Etymology 1, above. English apparently developed a substantive form of the adjective, which is not mirrored in Romance languages.
content (comparative more content, superlative most content)
content (countable and uncountable, plural contents)
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content (feminine contenta, masculine plural contents, feminine plural contentes)
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content (comparative contenter, superlative contentst)
content m (uncountable)
Inherited from Middle French content, from Old French, borrowed from Latin contentus.
content (feminine contente, masculine plural contents, feminine plural contentes)
See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.
content
From French content (“content”), compare Haitian Creole kontan.
content
From Old French content, borrowed from Latin contentus.
content m (feminine singular contente, masculine plural contens, feminine plural contentes)
From Old French, borrowed from Latin contentus (“having been held together, contained”), from contineō, continēre (“hold or keep together, surround, contain”).
content m
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