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provene
† proˈvene, v. Obs. rare. [a. F. provenir, or ad. L. prōvenīre to come forth, arise, originate, f. prō, pro-1 1 a + ven-īre to come.] intr. To come as proceeds or produce; to proceed, arise (from any source of revenue or profit).1505 Will of W. Clarke (Somerset Ho.), The cropp therof provenyng. 1584...
Oxford English Dictionary
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provenience
provenience (prəʊˈviːnɪəns) [f. L. prōvenient-em, pr. pple. of prōvenīre to provene: see -ence. Preferred to provenance by those who object to the French form of the latter: cf. convenance, convenience.] = provenance. Now chiefly U.S. (and to some extent Canad.). Elsewhere provenance is the more usu...
Oxford English Dictionary
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provente
▪ I. † ˈprovent Obs. [ad. L. prōvent-us a coming forth, produce, supply, increase, f. prōvent-, ppl. stem of prōven-īre to come forth, provene. So OF. provent (1382 in Godef.).] = provenue.1432–50 tr. Higden (Rolls) VI. 361 This kynge divided alle his proventes [L. proventus suos] into ij. partes. I...
Oxford English Dictionary
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provenance
provenance (ˈprɒvənəns) [a. F. provenance (prɔvnɑ̃s) Dict. Acad. 1835, f. provenant, pres. pple. of provenir to come forth, arise, ad. L. prōvenīre: see provene.] a. The fact of coming from some particular source or quarter; origin, derivation.1785 E. Sheridan Jrnl. (1960) 61 Miss Anstruther as I be...
Oxford English Dictionary
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