chattel
noun
No English definition recorded for this entry.
L317946 on Wikidata ↗Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /ˈt͡ʃæt.l̩/
noun
Etymology: From Middle English chatel, from Old French chatel, from Medieval Latin capitāle (English capital), from Latin capitālis (“of the head”), from caput (“head”) + -alis (“-al”). Compare the doublet cattle (“cows”), which is from an Anglo-Norman variant. Compare also capital and kith and kine (“all one’s possessions”), which also use “cow” to mean “property”.
- Tangible, movable property.
“[…] although of course the firm had changed hands many times over the centuries, […] But the box has always been part of the chattels, as it were.”
- A slave.
“Not all his servants and chattels are wraiths!”