Definitions

from The Century Dictionary.

  • noun The state or quality of being peccant; badness.
  • noun Offense; criminality; transgression.

from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.

  • noun The quality or state of being peccant.
  • noun A sin; an offense.

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • noun rare Faultiness, a state of being flawed.
  • noun A sin or moral transgression.
  • noun uncountable Sinfulness.
  • noun obsolete Unhealthiness.

Etymologies

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

From post-classical Latin peccantia, from Latin peccāns, present participle of peccō ("to sin").

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Examples

  • Instead, I want you to contemplate your very being, search deep, scour your skin of all its peccancy, and return to me with wide eyes and a new outlook.

    My Heaven is a State of Great Joy, Satisfaction, and The Beatles pabba 2008

  • Lest I be accused of over-promoting my own work surely a permissible peccancy on my own blog, in any event, I should also note that if you dislike The Dog of the North, it will also, I suspect, be for reasons of voice.

    Archive 2008-02-01 Tim Stretton 2008

  • Lest I be accused of over-promoting my own work surely a permissible peccancy on my own blog, in any event, I should also note that if you dislike The Dog of the North, it will also, I suspect, be for reasons of voice.

    :Acquired Taste Tim Stretton 2008

  • With regard to his peccancy I will not attempt, sir, to offer any palliation beyond the expression of my belief, that the tobacco was taken without any notion of the offence he was committing; in proof of which, I may mention, sir, the absence of any concealment on his part, when you came to the store.

    Fern Vale (Volume 1) or the Queensland Squatter Colin Munro

  • Suppose, again, that one proposes to deal with the peccancy of women from the earliest times, it is hard to find a lady, even one whose name has hitherto gleamed lurid in history, to whom some modern writer has not contrived by chapter and verse to apply a coat of whitewash.

    She Stands Accused 1935

  • There are a great many called up for this particular form of peccancy, you observe; even Master David has to lay aside his Psalm Book, and go forward with the others for chastisement.

    The Cords of Vanity A Comedy of Shirking James Branch Cabell 1918

  • In a moment Louis, with his inexorable eye for detail, realized the peccancy.

    The Sacrificial Altar 1916

  • An act is demoralizing or degrading in proportion as the perpetrator thereof considers it criminal, as it lowers his self-respect; and men regard their crinolinic peccancy as a venial fault, while women consider such lapses on the part of their sex as grievous sin; hence the lightning of lust scarce blackens the pillar while it shatters the vase.

    The Complete Works of Brann the Iconoclast, Volume 1. 1898

  • Imputations upon wives: horrible exultation at the universal peccancy of husbands.

    Ordeal of Richard Feverel — Volume 5 George Meredith 1868

  • Imputations upon wives: horrible exultation at the universal peccancy of husbands.

    Ordeal of Richard Feverel — Complete George Meredith 1868

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