English

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Etymology

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From Latin incommoditas. Compare French incommodité. See incommodious.

Noun

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incommodity (countable and uncountable, plural incommodities)

  1. (archaic) inconvenience; trouble; annoyance; disadvantage
    • 1678, Antiquitates Christianæ: Or, the History of the Life and Death of the Holy Jesus: [], London: [] E. Flesher, and R. Norton, for R[ichard] Royston, [], →OCLC:
      a great incommodity to the body
    • 1850, Nathaniel Hawthorne, “Introductory”, in The Scarlet Letter, a Romance, Boston, Mass.: Ticknor, Reed, and Fields, →OCLC:
      buried him under a bulk of incommodities
    • 1684, John Bunyan, The Pilgrim's Progress, Part II:
      To the first I answered, I had been a true man for a long season, and therefore it could not be expected that I should now cast in my lot with thieves. Then they demanded what I would say to the second. So I told them that the place from whence I came, had I not found incommodity there, I had not forsaken it at all; but finding it altogether unsuitable to me, and very unprofitable for me, I forsook it for this way.

References

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