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CANT . (I) (Possibly through the Fr. from See also: Lat. cantos, corner), in architecture, a See also: term used where the corner of a square is cut off, octagonally or otherwise
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Thus a See also: bay window, the sides of which are not parallel, or at right angles to the spectator, is said to be canted
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(2) (From the Lat. cantare, to sing, very early in use, in a depreciatory sense, of religious services), a word appearing in See also: English in the 16th century for the whining speech of beggars; hence it is applied to thieves' or See also: gipsies' See also: jargon, to the See also: peculiar language of any class or See also: sect, to any current phrase or turn of language, and particularly to the hypocritical use of pious phraseology
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[back] FRANCOIS CERTAIN CANROBERT (1809–1895) |
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