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  coupling couponing  
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   The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language: Fourth Edition.  2000.
 
coupon
 
SYLLABICATION:cou·pon
PRONUNCIATION:  kpn, ky-
NOUN:1. A negotiable certificate attached to a bond that represents a sum of interest due. 2a. One of a set of detachable certificates that may be torn off and redeemed as needed: a food coupon. b. A detachable part, as of a ticket or advertisement, that entitles the bearer to certain benefits, such as a cash refund or gift. c. A certificate accompanying a product that may be redeemed for a cash discount. d. A printed form, as in an advertisement, to be used as an order blank or for requesting information or obtaining a discount on merchandise. 3. A detachable slip calling for periodic payments, as for merchandise bought on an installment plan.
ETYMOLOGY:French, from Old French colpon, piece cut off, from colper, to cut, from colp, blow. See coup.
WORD HISTORY: A Roman might have had difficulty predicting what would become of the Latin word colaphus, which meant “a blow with the fist.” In Old French, a language that developed from Latin, the Late Latin word colpus, derived from colaphus, became colp, or modern French coup, with the same sense. Coup has had a rich development in French, gaining numerous senses, participating in numerous phrases, such as coup d'état,) and giving rise to many derivatives, including couper, “to divide with a blow or stroke, to cut.” Couper yielded the word coupon, “a portion that is cut off,” which came to refer to a certificate that was detachable from a principal certificate. The detachable certificate could be exchanged for interest or dividend payments by the holder of the principal certificate. Coupon is first recorded in English in 1822 with this sense and then came to apply to forms or tickets, detachable or otherwise, that could be exchanged for various benefits or used to request information.
 
 
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition. Copyright © 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by the Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

CONTENTS · INDEX · ILLUSTRATIONS · BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
  coupling couponing  
 
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