contraction

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English

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Etymology

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PIE word
*ḱóm

From Late Middle English contraccioun, contraxion (spasm, contraction; constriction, shrinking; act of pressing together),[1] from Old French contraction (modern French contraction), from Latin contractiō(n) (a drawing together, contraction; abridgement, shortening; dejection, despondency), from contrahō (to draw things together, assemble, collect, gather; to enter into a contract)[2] + -tiō(n) (suffix forming nouns relating to actions or their results). Contrahō is derived from con- (prefix denoting a bringing together of objects) + trahō (to drag, pull) (probably from Proto-Indo-European *dʰregʰ- (to drag, pull; to run)). By surface analysis, contract +‎ -ion (suffix denoting actions or processes, or their results).

Pronunciation

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Noun

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contraction (countable and uncountable, plural contractions)

  1. Senses relating to becoming involved with or entering into, especially entering into a contract.
    1. An act of incurring debt; also (generally), an act of acquiring something (generally negative).
      Our contraction of debt in this quarter has reduced our ability to attract investors.
    2. (archaic) An act of entering into a contract or agreement; specifically, a contract of marriage; a contracting; also (obsolete), a betrothal.
    3. (biology, medicine) The process of contracting or becoming infected with a disease.
      Synonyms: acquiring, catching
      the contraction of malaria
      • 2020 April 8, David Turner, “How Railway Staff were Conduits and Victims of a Pandemic”, in Rail, Peterborough, Cambridgeshire: Bauer Media, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 32:
        Railway workers were therefore a perfect subject for research, given the varied roles they undertook. If infection was greatest among the non-public-facing staff, it would suggest – given most worked outside – that contraction was caused by something found in the "atmosphere at large". If affliction was higher among the indoor and public-facing staff, it would suggest that human contact was the cause. And it was the latter point that was proven.
  2. Senses relating to pulling together or shortening.
    1. A (sometimes reversible) contracting or reduction in length, scope, size, or volume; a narrowing, a shortening, a shrinking.
      Antonyms: dilatation, dilation, expansion
      1. (archaic or obsolete) An abridgement or shortening of writing, etc.; an abstract, a summary; also (uncountable), brevity, conciseness.
        (abridgement or shortening of writing, etc.): Synonyms: condensation, epitome
      2. (biology, medicine) A stage of wound healing during which the wound edges are gradually pulled together.
      3. (biology, medicine) A shortening of a muscle during its use; specifically, a strong and often painful shortening of the uterine muscles prior to or during childbirth.
      4. (economics) A period of economic decline or negative growth.
        The country’s economic contraction was caused by high oil prices.
      5. (linguistics) A process whereby one or more sounds of a free morpheme (a word) are reduced or lost, such that it becomes a bound morpheme (a clitic) that attaches phonologically to an adjacent word.
        Hyponyms: apheresis, apocope, elision, syncope
        In the English words didn’t, that’s, and wanna, the endings -n’t, -’s, and -a arose by contraction.
      6. (linguistics, phonology, prosody) Synonym of syncope (the elision or loss of a sound from the interior of a word, especially of a vowel sound with loss of a syllable)
      7. (ring theory, of an ideal in the codomain of a ring homomorphism) The preimage of the given ideal under the given homomorphism.
      8. (orthography) In the English language: a shortened form of a word, often with omitted letters replaced by an apostrophe or a diacritical mark.
        Don’t is a contraction of do not; and ’til is a contraction of until.
      9. (by extension) A shorthand symbol indicating an omission for the purpose of brevity.
    2. (obsolete, rare) An act of collecting or gathering.

Derived terms

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Translations

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ contracciǒun, n.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007.
  2. ^ Compare contraction, n.”, in OED Online Paid subscription required, Oxford: Oxford University Press, March 2023; contraction, n.”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.

Further reading

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French

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Etymology

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PIE word
*ḱóm

From Old French contraction, borrowed from Latin contractiōnem, the accusative singular of contractiō (a drawing together, contraction; abridgement, shortening; dejection, despondency), from contrahō (to draw things together, assemble, collect, gather; to enter into a contract) + -tiō (suffix forming nouns relating to actions or their results); contrahō is derived from con- (prefix denoting a bringing together of objects) + trahō (to drag, pull) (probably from Proto-Indo-European *dʰregʰ- (to drag, pull; to run)).

Pronunciation

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Noun

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contraction f (plural contractions)

  1. contraction
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Further reading

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