decimation
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Latin decimātiō, a punishment where every 10th man in a unit would be stoned to death by the men who were spared. Used by the Romans to keep order in their military. Compare septimation and vicesimation.
Pronunciation
Noun
decimation (plural decimations)
- (strictly) The killing or punishment of every tenth person, usually by lot.
- 1607, William Shakespeare, The Life of Timon of Athens, Act V, Scene v:
- By decimation and a tithed death,
... take thou the destin'd tenth.
- By decimation and a tithed death,
- 1607, William Shakespeare, The Life of Timon of Athens, Act V, Scene v:
- (generally) The killing or destruction of any large portion of a population.
- 1702: Cotton Mather, Magnalia Christi Americana - And the whole army had cause to enquire into their own rebellions, when they saw the Lord of Hosts, with a dreadful decimation, taking off so many of our brethren by the worst of executioners.
- A tithe or the act of tithing.
- (mathematics) The creation of a new sequence comprising only every nth element of a source sequence.
- (telecommunications) A digital signal-processing technique for reducing the number of samples in a discrete-time signal.
Synonyms
Coordinate terms
- (proportionate reduction, by single aliquot part): quintation (1/5), septimation (1/7), vicesimation (1/20), tricesimation (1/30), centesimation (1/100)
Related terms
Translations
selection of every tenth person for death or other punishment
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killing or destruction of a large portion of a population
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tithing — see tithing
creation of a new sequence comprising every nth element of the original
digital signal-processing technique
References
- The Century Dictionary, The Century Co., New York, 1914
Anagrams
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