Motte

English dictionary entry

Meanings

name
  1. A surname.
noun
  1. A raised earth mound, often topped with a wooden or stone structure and surrounded with a ditch.
  2. An argument which is uncontroversial and easy to defend (in the context of a motte and bailey fallacy).
noun
  1. Alternative form of mott.

Pronunciation

/ˈmɒt/

Word forms

Motte mottes

Etymology

* As a French, Walloon, and West Flemish surname, from Old French mot, motte (“embankment, hill, mound”), from Medieval Latin mota (“fortified height”), which could be of Celtic origin and from Gaulish *mutt, *mutta (compare Welsh mwd (“vault, arch, canopy”), Irish móta (“moat”), though this itself could have been borrowed from the English) or otherwise of Germanic origin and from the root of mud. Compare Delamotte, Demotte, Lamotte. * As an English surname, variant of Mott. * As a German surname, perhaps from Motten in Bavaria, first attested 837, from the personal name Moto (compare *mōd (“courage, bravery”)).

Related words

Derived words

This entry uses open data from Wiktionary (CC BY-SA/GFDL). Word forms are used for search and are not indexed as separate pages.