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Etymology of the English word confiture

the English word confiture
derived from the Old French word confiture
derived from the Old French word confit
derived from the Old French word confire
derived from the Medieval Latin word conficere (compose; amass, collect; finish off; kill, dispatch; make, construct; prepare)
derived from the Latin word facere (to make; act, take action, be active; compose, write; classify; do, make; create; make, build, construct; produce; produce by growth; bring forth)
derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *dhē-
derived from the Medieval Latin word confectum
derived from the Latin word confectus (with her litter)
derived from the Medieval Latin word conficere (compose; amass, collect; finish off; kill, dispatch; make, construct; prepare)
derived from the Latin word facere (to make; act, take action, be active; compose, write; classify; do, make; create; make, build, construct; produce; produce by growth; bring forth)
derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *dhē-

Date

The earliest known usage of confiture in English dates from the 19th century.

Usage

Word found in Modern English



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