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Came across the word 'LESE' which so many dictionaries describe as 'to lose' Is this a new word , or did I just not come across it before?
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um... you've never come across lese majesty?
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stranger
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sorry to say - but no.... anyway can you help further and demonstrate a use...?
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Or a bit more authentically "lèse majesté". A crime against the sovreign, offense against a ruler's dignity, treason.
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addict
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'LESE' which so many dictionaries describe as 'to lose' Is this a new word , or did I just not come across it before?
WELCOME Anshul!
It's not a new word ...
\Lese\ (l[=e]z), v. t. To lose. [Obs.] --Chaucer. Source: Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, © 1996, 1998 MICRA, Inc.
The Macquarie (Australian) dictionary only has the following:
lese-majesty // noun Law 1. any of various crimes or offences against the sovereign power in a state. 2. (humorous) any presumptuous conduct. [French, from Latin: injured sovereignty]
It's obviously not a commonly used word though - my Microsoft spellchecker doesn't like it.
Hev
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Stupid wild-ass guess here: could lese be related to the suffix -less?
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For lese the OED has links to leash, lease, leach (obs. thin strips of meat) and the verb leese.
From the definition of the obsolete verb leese:
[A Com. Teut. strong vb.: OE. -léosan, only in compounds, beléosan, forléosan (-léas, -luron, -loren) corresponds to OFris. ur-liasa, OS. far-liosan (Du. ver-liezen), OHG. vir-liosan (MHG. verliesen, mod.G. verlieren, influenced by the pa. tense and pa. pple.), Goth. fra-liusan; other derivatives of the root (*leus-: laus-: los-) are leasing n., -less, loose a. and v., lose v., loss. The root *leus- is usually regarded as an extension of the *leu-, *lu- in Gr. kÊ-eim, L. so-lv-Sre to loosen.] 1. trans. = lose, in its various senses; to part with or be parted from by misadventure, through change in conditions, etc.; to be deprived of; to cease to possess; to fail to preserve, or maintain; to fail to gain or secure; to fail to profit by, to spend (time) unprofitably; to use (labour) to no advantage. Also refl. a. In present stem.
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Looks like lese (in the original post of this thread) may not tie into lese majeste.
The former, as Rouspeteur notes, traces back to teutonic tongues (as does the suffix -less), referring to "lost". But lese majeste comes from latin laesa or laesae, "injured", via middle french.
tsuwm, am I missing something here?
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