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Etymology of the English word chancery

the English word chancery
derived from the English word chancellery
derived from the French word chancellerie
derived from the Old French word chancelier
derived from the Late Latin word cancellarius (chancellor; living, kept behind bars; porter, doorkeeper; secretary)
derived from the Latin word cancelli (latticework)
derived from the Latin word cancer (crab; Cancer; the_South; lattice, grid; barrier)
derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *kar-
derived from the Latin word cancri
derived from the Anglo-French word chancellerie
derived from the Old French word chancelier
derived from the Late Latin word cancellarius (chancellor; living, kept behind bars; porter, doorkeeper; secretary)
derived from the Latin word cancelli (latticework)
derived from the Latin word cancer (crab; Cancer; the_South; lattice, grid; barrier)
derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *kar-
derived from the Latin word cancri

Date

The earliest known usage of chancery in English dates from the 14th century.

Usage

Word found in Modern English



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