Langimage
English

intermittently-denied

|in-ter-mit-tent-ly-de-nied|

C1

🇺🇸

/ˌɪntərˈmɪtəntli dɪˈnaɪd/

🇬🇧

/ˌɪntəˈmɪtəntli dɪˈnaɪd/

irregularly refused

Etymology
Etymology Information

'intermittently-denied' originates from the combination of 'intermittent' and 'deny'. 'Intermittent' comes from Latin 'intermittere', where 'inter-' meant 'between' and 'mittere' meant 'to send'. 'Deny' comes from Latin 'denegare', where 'de-' meant 'away' and 'negare' meant 'to refuse'.

Historical Evolution

'Intermittent' changed from the Latin word 'intermittere' to the Old French 'intermettre', and eventually became the modern English word 'intermittent'. 'Deny' evolved from the Latin 'denegare' to the Old French 'denier', and eventually became the modern English word 'deny'.

Meaning Changes

Initially, 'intermittent' meant 'to send between', but over time it evolved into its current meaning of 'occurring at irregular intervals'. 'Deny' initially meant 'to refuse', and this meaning has largely remained the same in modern usage.

Meanings by Part of Speech

Adjective 1

describes something that is denied at irregular intervals.

The service was intermittently-denied due to technical issues.

Synonyms

Antonyms

Last updated: 2025/05/17 22:19