truce

/tɹuːs/

UK: /tɹuːs/

truce

English Noun Top 9,201
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Definition

A period of time in which no fighting takes place due to an agreement between the opposed parties.

Etymology

From Middle English trewes, triwes, trues, plural of trewe, triewe, true (“faithfulness, assurance, pact”), from Old English trēowa, singularized plural of trēow, trȳw (“faith; pledge; agreement”), from Proto-West Germanic *treuwu, from Proto-Germanic *trewwō (compare Dutch trouw, German Treue, Danish tro, French trêve [< Germanic]), noun form of *triwwiz (“trusty, faithful”). More at true.

Example Sentences

  • "An uneasy truce"
  • "[I]n about ſix VVeeks or tvvo Months, the Dyſentery gave Truce, in vvhich Time I vvas often fretted vvith ſtrangurious Symptoms."
  • "He asked for a truce with his school enemy for five days."
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