homicide
See also: homicidé
English
Etymology
From Old French homicide, from Latin homicīda (“man-slayer”) and homicīdium (“manslaughter”).
Pronunciation
Noun
homicide (countable and uncountable, plural homicides)
- (countable, crime) The killing of one person by another, whether premeditated or unintentional.
- (countable) A person who kills another.
- (countable, US, police jargon) A victim of homicide; a person who has been unlawfully killed by someone else.
- 1996, A J Holt, Watch Me :
- “She was a hippie kid. How hard would you work a case like that?”
- “As hard as anyone else,” said Goddard. There was an irritated note in his voice. “She was a homicide. She got what every homicide investigation gets.”
- 2003, Ellen Perry Berkeley, Keith's People →ISBN, page 58:
- We don't even know the woman was a homicide. Didn't they say it was possible they both jumped?
- 2004, Jon Talton, Dry Heat →ISBN, page 40:
- The medical examiner was behind on autopsies and cranky, so we didn't even know if the old guy in the pool was a homicide.
- 1996, A J Holt, Watch Me :
Synonyms
- (unlawful killing of a person by another): assassination (unintentional), killing, first-degree murder (US; intentional), manslaughter (unintentional), murder (intentional), second-degree murder (US; unintentional)
- (person who unlawfully kills another person): assassin, killer, man-slayer, murderer
- (victim of homicide): murder victim
Derived terms
Translations
the killing of one person by another
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a person who kills another
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police jargon: a victim of homicide
- The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables, removing any numbers. Numbers do not necessarily match those in definitions. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout#Translations.
Translations to be checked
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French
Etymology
From Old French, from Latin homicidium
Pronunciation
Audio (file)
Verb
homicide
Further reading
- “homicide” in le Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
Middle French
Alternative forms
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