Word of the day

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quietus

noun

qui·etus | \ kwī-ˈē-təs ,
-ˈā-
\
Definition of quietus
1
: final settlement (as of a debt)
2
: removal from activity
especially : death
3
: something that quiets or represses
put the quietus on their celebration
Synonyms
curtains, death, decease, demise, dissolution, doom, end, exit, expiration, fate, grave, great divide, passage, passing, sleep
Antonyms
birth, nativity

 

Did You Know?

In the early 1500s, English speakers adopted the Medieval Latin phrase quietus est (literally “he is quit”) as the name for the writ of discharge exempting a baron or knight from payment of a knight’s fee to the king. The expression was later shortened to “quietus” and applied to the termination of any debt. William Shakespeare was the first to use “quietus” as a metaphor for the termination of life: “For who would bear the whips and scorns of time, … When he himself might his quietus make / With a bare bodkin?” (Hamlet). The third meaning, which is more influenced by “quiet” than “quit,” appeared in the 19th century. It often occurs in the phrase “put the quietus on” (as in, “The bad news put the quietus on their celebration”).
Examples of quietus in a Sentence
was granted a quietus on the remainder of the debt in the old man’s will
her unshakable belief in a blissful afterlife allowed her to meet her quietus without the slightest tinge of fear or regret
First Known Use of quietus
1540, in the meaning defined at sense 1
History and Etymology for quietus
Middle English quietus est, borrowed from Medieval Latin, “he is quit,” formula of discharge from obligation