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      • English picked up poltroon from Middle French, which in turn got it from Old Italian poltrone, meaning "coward." The Italian term has been traced to the Latin pullus, a root that is also an ancestor of pullet ("a young hen") and poultry.
      www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/poltroon
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  2. Dec 9, 2020 · Old English bolster "bolster, cushion, something stuffed so that it swells up," especially "a long, stuffed pillow," from Proto-Germanic *bolkhstraz (source also of Old Norse bolstr, Danish, Swedish, Dutch bolster, German polster), from PIE *bhelgh-"to swell," extended form of root *bhel-(2) "to blow, swell." Applied since 15c. to various parts ...

    • Français (French)

      Entrées associées poltroon. bolster (n.) En vieil anglais,...

    • 한국어 (Korean)

      poltroon 뜻: 겁쟁이; "겁쟁이; 작은 것; 악당" [poltron로 철자를 쓰는 존슨],...

    • Pollyanna

      Pollyanna. (n.) "one who finds cause for gladness in the...

  3. English picked up poltroon from Middle French, which in turn got it from Old Italian poltrone, meaning "coward." The Italian term has been traced to the Latin pullus, a root that is also an ancestor of pullet ("a young hen") and poultry.

  4. Sep 27, 2024 · Pronunciation. [edit] (UK) IPA (key): /pɒlˈtɹuːn/ Audio (Southern England): (US) IPA (key): /pɑlˈtɹun/, /pɔlˈtɹun/, /polˈtɹun/ Rhymes: -uːn. Noun. [edit] poltroon (plural poltroons) An ignoble or total coward; a dastard; a mean-spirited wretch. Synonyms. [edit] (ignoble coward): craven, dastard. Translations. [edit] ± an ignoble or arrant coward.

  5. poltroon. noun: An utter coward. From French poltron (coward), from Italian poltrone (lazy person), from Latin pullus (young animal). Ultimately from the Indo-European root pau- (few, little), which is also the source of few, foal, filly, pony, poor, pauper, poco, and catchpole. Earliest documented use: 1529.

  6. pol·troon. (pŏl-tro͞on′) n. An utter coward. [French poltron, from Old Italian poltrone, coward, idler, perhaps augmentative of poltro, unbroken colt (from Vulgar Latin *pulliter, from Latin pullus, young animal; see pau- in Indo-European roots) or from poltro, bed, lazy.] pol·troon′er·y n.

  7. poltroon. 2 meanings: 1. an abject or contemptible coward 2. → a rare word for cowardly.... Click for more definitions.

  8. All you need to know about "POLTROON" in one place: definitions, pronunciations, synonyms, grammar insights, collocations, examples, and translations.

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