Purview denotes the scope, limit, or range of a statute, authority, or understanding, originating from Anglo-French legal terms meaning 'provided that'.
Purview refers to the scope or limit of a statute, or the range of vision, understanding, or authority. It originates from Anglo-French legal statutes introduced with phrases like 'purveu est' ('it is provided').
Word | purview |
---|---|
Date | June 20, 2007 |
Type | noun |
Syllables | PER-vyoo |
Etymology | You might guess that there is a connection between "purview" and "view." "Purview" comes from "purveu," a word often found in the legal statutes of 13th- and 14th-century England. These statutes, written in the Anglo-French, opened with the phrases "purveu est" and "purveu que," which translate literally to "it is provided" and "provided that." "Purveu" derives from "porveu," the past participle of the Old French verb "porveeir," meaning "to provide." "View" derives (via Middle English) from the past participle of another Anglo-French word, "veer," meaning "to see," and ultimately from the Latin "vidēre," an ancestor of "porveeir" meaning "to see." *Indicates the sense illustrated by the example sentence. |
Examples | The court ruled that the student's T-shirt fell under the purview of the First Amendment. |
Definition | 1 a : the body or enacting part of a statute b : the limit, purpose, or scope of a statute 2 : the range or limit of authority, competence, responsibility, concern, or intention 3 : range of vision, understanding, or cognizance |
Tags: wordoftheday::noun
Learn with these flashcards. Click next, previous, or up to navigate to more flashcards for this subject.
Next card: Shoestring money small business june noun shoo-string earlier
Previous card: Polk political roorback dirty campaign letter published baron
Up to card list: Word of the Day