benevolence
See also: bénévolence
English
Etymology
Circa 1400, original sense “good will, disposition to do good”, Old French benivolence from Latin benevolentia (also directly from Latin), literally “good will”, from bene (“well, good”) + volentia, form of volēns, form of volō (“I wish”), components cognate to English benefit and voluntary, more distantly will (via Proto-Indo-European).[1]
Noun
benevolence (countable and uncountable, plural benevolences)
- (uncountable) Disposition to do good
- (uncountable) Charitable kindness
- (countable) An altruistic gift or act
Related terms
Translations
disposition to do good
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References
- ↑ “benevolence” in Douglas Harper, Online Etymology Dictionary, 2001–2018.
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