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Privilegiate

Privilegiate is an English verb (and occasionally an adjective) meaning to confer privileges or to place someone or something under special rights or immunities. It is a rare and chiefly historical form; in contemporary usage, speakers normally use privilege as a verb or privileged as an adjective. When used, privilegiate typically appears in formal, legal, or philosophical discussion about systems of rights and exemptions.

Etymology: The word is derived from privilege, which comes from Old French privelege and ultimately from Latin

Usage and nuance: As a vocabulary item, privilegiate emphasizes the act of conferring privileges rather than

Related terms include privilege (the right or advantage itself), privileged (having privileges or an elevated status),

privilegium,
meaning
a
private
law
or
grant
of
immunity.
The
suffix
-ate
is
a
productive
English
ending
that
forms
transitive
verbs
from
nouns,
giving
privilegiate
the
sense
“to
make
privileged”
or
“to
grant
privileges.”
The
adjective
sense
“privilegiate”
is
sometimes
confused
with
“privileged,”
which
is
the
common
participial
form.
simply
having
them.
Depending
on
context,
it
can
carry
normative
implications
about
favoritism
or
legal
privilege.
In
modern
prose,
writers
usually
replace
it
with
“to
privilege”
(verb)
or
“privileged”
(adjective).
and
privileging
(the
present
participle
form).
See
also
discussions
of
exemptions,
immunities,
and
legal
privileges
in
historical
or
theoretical
contexts.