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    Guer·don
    /ˈɡərdn/

    noun

    • 1. a reward or recompense.

    verb

    • 1. give a reward to (someone): "there might come a time in which he should guerdon them"
  2. noun. guer· don ˈgər-dᵊn. : reward, recompense. guerdon transitive verb. Did you know? Guerdon and Shakespeare. Guerdon dates back to the 14th century, when Geoffrey Chaucer used it in The Romaunt of the Rose (ca. 1366): "He quitte him wel his guerdon there."

  3. Guerdon definition: a reward, recompense, or requital.. See examples of GUERDON used in a sentence.

  4. 5 days ago · guerdon (third-person singular simple present guerdons, present participle guerdoning, simple past and past participle guerdoned) ( transitive) To give such a reward to.

  5. A guerdon is a reward. The disappointing guerdon for your day spent shoveling your elderly neighbor's driveway might be a little tin of very old licorice candy. The word guerdon, pronounced "GER-dun," is an Old French word that literally means "reward or payment."

  6. noun. 1. Something given in return for a service or accomplishment: accolade, award, honorarium, plum, premium, prize, reward. Idiom: token of appreciation. 2. Something justly deserved: comeuppance, desert (often used in plural), due, recompense, reward, wage (often used in plural). Informal: lump (used in plural).

  7. 6 days ago · guerdon in American English. (ˈɡɜːrdn) noun. 1. a reward, recompense, or requital. transitive verb. 2. to give a guerdon to; reward. Most material © 2005, 1997, 1991 by Penguin Random House LLC.

  8. Origin of Guerdon. From Old French guerdon, from Medieval Latin widerdonum, from West Germanic (whence Old English wiþerlēan ), literally ‘again-payment’, with the second element assimilated to Latin donum (“gift”).

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