ostent

Not valid in Scrabble

It's a recognised English word, but it isn't in the official NASPA Scrabble word list.

Scrabble points
6
Words With Friends
7
Letters
6
Pronunciation
/ˈɒstɛnt/
See all 5 pronunciations
/ˈɒstɛnt/ · /ˈɑstɛnt/ · /ɒˈstɛnt/ · /ɑˈstɛnt/ · /ə-/

Definition of ostent

5 senses · 2 parts of speech · etymology included

verb

  1. (ambitransitive, obsolete)To make an ambitious display of; to exhibit or show boastingly; to ostentate.
See all 5 definitions

verb

  1. (ambitransitive, obsolete)To make an ambitious display of; to exhibit or show boastingly; to ostentate.

noun

  1. (archaic, rare)A display, an exhibition; an appearance, a manifestation.
    “Vſe all the obſeruance of ciuility, / Like one well ſtudied in a ſad oſtent / To pleaſe his Grandam, neuer truſt me more.”
    “Be merry, and employ your cheefeſt thoughts / To Courtſhip, and ſuch faire oſtents of loue, / As ſhall conueniently become you there.”
    “In every object, mountain, tree and star—In every birth and life, / As part of each—evolv'd from each—meaning, behind the ostent, / A mystic cipher waits infolded.”
  2. A boastful, ostentatious display or exhibition.
  3. (archaic, rare)A portent, a token.
    “We ask'd of God that some ostent might clear / Our cloudy business, who gave us sign.”
    “Latinus, frighted with this dire ostent, / For counsel to his father Faunus went,”
  4. (historical, obsolete)One sixtieth of an hour: a minute (60 seconds).
    “[…] one would be inclined to suspect some confusion in Bede's information, seeing that 40 moments and 60 ostents both are equal to an hour. I cannot find an example of the use of ostentum as a measure of time before Bede, and it is first used as one-sixtieth of an hour in 978 A.D. by Alcuin, who knows a double use.”
    “As listed in the Oxford English Dictionary under atom, the hour in the table of Papias contained either 5 points, 10 minutes, 15 parts, 40 moments, 60 ostents, [or] 480 ounces[…]”

Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.

Etymology

From Middle French ostenter (“to make an ostentatious display of”), or directly from its etymon Latin ostentāre (“to exhibit, present, show; to show off”), frequentative of ostendere (“to exhibit, show”), from ob- (prefix meaning ‘against; towards’) + tendere (“to extend, stretch; to distend”) (from Proto-Indo-European *tend- (“to extend, stretch”)). Doublet of ostentate.

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