1 accouter | Definition of accouter

accoutre

verb
ac·​cou·​tre | \ ə-ˈkü-tər How to pronounce accoutre (audio) \
variants: or accouter
accoutred or accoutered; accoutring or accoutering\ -​ˈkü-​tə-​riŋ How to pronounce accoutering (audio) , -​ˈkü-​triŋ \

Definition of accoutre

transitive verb

: to provide with equipment or furnishings : outfit

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Synonyms for accoutre

Synonyms

equip, fit (out), furnish, gird, kit (up or out) [chiefly British], outfit, provision, rig, supply

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Choose the Right Synonym for accoutre

furnish, equip, outfit, appoint, accoutre mean to supply one with what is needed. furnish implies the provision of any or all essentials for performing a function. a sparsely furnished apartment equip suggests the provision of something making for efficiency in action or use. a fully equipped kitchen outfit implies provision of a complete list or set of articles as for a journey, an expedition, or a special occupation. outfitted the family for a ski trip appoint implies provision of complete and usually elegant or elaborate equipment or furnishings. a lavishly appointed apartment accoutre suggests the supplying of personal dress or equipment for a special activity. fully accoutred members of a polar expedition

Examples of accoutre in a Sentence

hikers accoutred with walking sticks, water bottles, trail maps, and compasses

First Known Use of accoutre

1533, in the meaning defined above

History and Etymology for accoutre

borrowed from French accoutrer, going back to Middle French acoutrer, acoustrer, going back to Old French acoutrer "to put in place, position," perhaps going back to Gallo-Romance *acconsūtūrāre "to sew together, mend," from a-, prefix forming transitive verbs (going back to Latin ad- ad-) + *consūtūra "sewing, seam" — more at couture

Note: If the etymon behind accoutrer is *accō(n)sūtūrāre (>*accōs(ŭ)tūrāre?), the sense development is presumably from "sew together, mend" to "prepare, trim, adorn." The phonetic development is more difficult; the assumption is that the tonic form would be *acostur (1. singular) and the weak form nous acostrons, with the weak form being generalized throughout the paradigm. The longer form is evidenced in 13th-century racousturer, "to stitch up (a wound), mend (a garment)" (unless this verb is built independently on cousture). Such a development is possible, but it has been pointed out that verbs derived from nouns in -ūra tend to preserve the -ū-: amesurer, afaiturer, empasturer (though most such verbs clearly do not date back to earlier Gallo-Romance or Vulgar Latin). An alternative explanation sees accoutrer as a derivative of coutre, "coulter, blade (of a plow)," in which case the -s- in acoustrer would be hypercorrection ([s] in this position having disappeared by the 14th century); but the semantic development of such a verb is hardly transparent.

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More from Merriam-Webster on accoutre

Rhyming Dictionary: Words that rhyme with accoutre

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