English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

Inherited from the Middle English novitē (an innovative practice), borrowed from Middle French novité (novelty, change, innovation), from the Latin novitās (newness, novelty; rareness, strangeness; newness of rank; reformation); cognate with the Italian novità, the Portuguese novidade, the Romanian noutate, and the Spanish novedad.

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

novity (countable and uncountable, plural novities)

  1. (countable, now rare) An innovation; a novelty.
    • 1460, “Dublin documents” quoted by John Thomas Gilbert in Calendar of the Ancient Records of Dublin (1889), volume 1, page 307
      Such novitees hath not be uset afor this time.
    • 1972 December 22nd, The Times Literary Supplement, column 5, page 1,545:
      The ‘Jesus freaks’ and other extravagant novities of American religious life.
  2. (uncountable, now rare) Novelty; newness.
    • 1569, James Sanford [translator], Of the Vanitie and Vncertaintie of Artes and Sciences, 1st edition, translation of original by Henricus Cornelius Agrippa, page 14b:
      With a nouitee or straungnesse full of trifles.
    • 1823 December, Charles Lamb, “Amicus Redivivus”, in The London Magazine, column 1, page 615:
      That unmeaning assumption of eternal novity.

Translations edit

References edit