Vice

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Middle English: via Old French from Latin vitium .


Ety img vice.png

wiktionary

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From Middle English vice, from Old French vice, from Latin vitium(“ fault or blemish”). Displaced native Old English unþēaw.

See vise.

From Latin vice(“in place of”), ablative form of vicis. Compare French fois(“time”) and Spanish vez(“time, turn”).


etymonline

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vice (n.1)

"moral fault, wickedness," c. 1300, from Old French vice "fault, failing, defect, irregularity, misdemeanor" (12c.), from Latin vitium "defect, offense, blemish, imperfection," in both physical and moral senses (in Medieval Latin also vicium; source also of Italian vezzo "usage, entertainment"), which is of uncertain origin.

Vice squad "special police unit targeting prostitution, narcotics, gambling, etc.," is attested from 1905, American English. Vice anglais "fetish for corporal punishment," literally "the English vice," is attested from 1942, from French. In Old French, the seven deadly sins were les set vices.


Horace and Aristotle have already spoken to us about the virtues of their forefathers and the vices of their own times, and through the centuries, authors have talked the same way. If all this were true, we would be bears today. [Montesquieu, "Pensées"]





vice (n.2)

"tool for holding," see vise.