APPANAGE


Meaning of APPANAGE in English

I. noun

also ap·a·nage ˈapənij

( -s )

Etymology: French apanage, from Old French, from apaner to make suitable provision for a younger son or a daughter (from Old Provençal apanar to feed, support, from a- — from Latin ad- — + -panar, from pan bread, from Latin panis ) + -age — more at food

1.

a. : a grant (as of lands, offices, state revenues, or money) made by a sovereign or a legislative body for the support of dependent members of the royal family or of the ruler's principal liege men

b. : a property or a privilege appropriated to or by a person as his share or perquisite

religious supremacy became a kind of appanage to the civil sovereignty — H.H.Milman

2. : a customary or rightful endowment or adjunct

beauty which is the natural appanage of happiness — C.K.D.Patmore

3.

a. : a territory or province held in possession as an appanage : principality

b. : a territory subject to outside rule : dependency

Synonyms: see right

II. transitive verb

also apanage

( -ed/-ing/-s )

: to provide or endow with an appanage

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.