knightship

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English

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Etymology 1

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From knight +‎ -ship.

Noun

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knightship (plural knightships)

  1. The honor bestowed that makes someone a knight.
    • 1864-1865, Anthony Trollope, Can You Forgive Her?[1]:
      No selection from the alphabet, no doctorship, no fellowship, be it of ever so learned or royal a society, no knightship,--not though it be of the Garter,--confers so fair an honour.
  2. Honorific formal address to a knighted person. Usually used with the relevant possessive pronoun.
    • 1899, S. R. Crockett, The Black Douglas[2]:
      Fare your knightship well.
Synonyms
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Etymology 2

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From knight +‎ ship.

Noun

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knightship (plural knightships)

  1. (cellular automata) A spaceship, in a cellular automaton, which moves knightwise (i.e., moving two spaces along the x-axis for every space it moves along the y-axis [or vice versa], in the manner of a chess knight); a spaceship which moves with slope 2; a (2,1) spaceship.
Hypernyms
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Coordinate terms
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