WORD OF THE DAY
HERMITAGE \ HER-mih-tij \ noun
Definition
1: the habitation of a hermit
2a: a secluded residence or private retreat;
2b: monastery
3: the life or condition of a hermit
Examples
"At a Catholic hermitage near Lac Saint-Jean, the Franciscan Capuchin friar Sylvain Richer told me he grew up saying 'Beam me up, Scotty.'"
— Associated Press, June 29, 2015
"The facility will include a convent, a chapel, a library, a Rosary Walk area, coffee shops, hermitages or small cottages, and areas for larger retreat groups and for people or couples to stay."
— Rebecca McKinsey, Daily Times Herald (Carroll, Iowa), December 22, 2014
"The facility will include a convent, a chapel, a library, a Rosary Walk area, coffee shops, hermitages or small cottages, and areas for larger retreat groups and for people or couples to stay."
— Rebecca McKinsey, Daily Times Herald (Carroll, Iowa), December 22, 2014
Did You Know?
Hermitage is of course related to hermit, a word for one who retreats from society to live in solitude, often for religious reasons. The origins of hermitage and hermit are found in Greek. Erēmos (meaning "desolate") gave rise to erēmia (meaning "desert") and eventually to the noun erēmitēs, which was used for a person living in the desert, or, more broadly, for a recluse.
The word journeyed from Greek to Latin to Anglo-French to Middle English, where it eventually transformed into hermit. The related hermitage was borrowed into English from Anglo-French in the 14th century.
A hermitage can be the dwelling of a hermit (e.g., a mountain shack or a monastery) or simply a secluded home.
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