abbey

English dictionary entry

Meanings

noun
  1. The office or dominion of an abbot or abbess.
  2. A monastery or society of people, secluded from the world and devoted to religion and celibacy, which is headed by an abbot or abbess; also, the monastic building or buildings.
  3. The church of a monastery.
  4. A residence that was previously an abbatial building.
  5. The abele or white poplar (Populus alba).
name
  1. A diminutive of the female given name Abigail, from Hebrew.
  2. A diminutive of the male given name Albert, from the Germanic languages.
  3. A British surname.
  4. Westminster Abbey.
  5. The precincts of the Abbey of Holyrood.
  6. A place name:
  7. A hamlet in Dunkeswell parish, East Devon district, Devon, England, probably named for the local abbey (OS grid ref ST1410).
  8. A small village south-east of Tuam, County Galway, Ireland (Irish grid ref M 5043).
  9. A village west of Portumna, County Galway (Irish grid ref M 7305).
  10. A village in the Rural Municipality of Miry Creek, Saskatchewan, Canada, named after a farm in Ireland.
  11. A suburb of Busselton, Western Australia, named after landholder D. Abbey.

Pronunciation

/ˈæb.i/ En-us-abbey.ogg en-ca-abbey.ogg

Word forms

abbey abbeys abby

Etymology

From A.D. 1250 in Middle English abbey, abbeye (“convent headed by an abbot”) (compare archaic English abbaye), itself borrowed from Old French abaïe, abbaïe, abeïe, abbeïe (Modern French abbaye) from Late Latin or Ecclesiastical Latin abbātia, from Classical Latin abbās (“abbot”). Doublet of abbacy and Opatija. See abbot.

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