Word of the Day Archive
Thursday August 18, 2005

parley \PAR-lee\ , noun:
A conference or discussion, especially with an enemy, as with regard to a truce or other matters.

The government recognized his knack for parleying with tribes, and it sent him all over the West.
-- Geoffrey O'Gara, What You See in Clear Water

Whether the Indians came out to parley or, seeing that the fort was about to fall, came out to surrender is unclear.
-- Willard Sterne Randall, George Washington: A Life

In case of Servia's non-compliance with the ultimatum the army will invade the kingdom without further parley.
-- "Austria Ready to Invade Servia Sends Ultimatum", New York Times, July 24, 1914

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Parley comes from Old French parlée, from parler, "to speak," from Medieval Latin parabolare, from Late Latin parabola, "a proverb, a parable, a similitude," from Greek parabole, "a comparison, a placing beside," from paraballein, "to throw beside, hence to compare," from para-, "beside" + ballein, "to throw."

Dictionary.com Entry and Pronunciation for parley

 

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