crusado
English
Etymology
Partially borrowed from Spanish cruzado as well as Portuguese cruzado.
Noun
crusado (plural crusados or crusadoes)
- (archaic) A crusader.
- (archaic) A crusade.
- Obsolete spelling of cruzado (old monetary unit)
- 1719, Daniel Defoe, The Life and Adventures of Robinson Crusoe Of York, Mariner, Vol. 1, published 1812:
- Secondly, There was the account of four years more, while they kept the effects in their hands, before the government claimed the administration, as being the effects of a person not to be found, which they called civil death; and the balance of this, the value of the plantation increasing, amounted to nineteen thousand four hundred and forty-six crusadoes, being about three thousand two hundred and forty moidores.
References
- “crusado, n.”, in OED Online
, Oxford, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, launched 2000.
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