honour - meaning and definition. What is honour
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What (who) is honour - definition

ABSTRACT CONCEPT ENTAILING A PERCEIVED QUALITY OF WORTHINESS AND RESPECTABILITY
Honor; Honours; Changes in Honour; Hono(u)r; Dishonour; Culture of honor; Dishonor; Honour culture; Honor culture; Culture of law; Honoring
  • accepting Aaron Burr's challenge]].
  • Wall of Honour, [[Royal Military College of Canada]]

honour         
BE; AE spelling: honor
I
n.
respect
credit
1) to bring, do honour to (she brought honour to her family)
2) an honour to (he is an honour to his school)
3) in smb.'s honour; in honour of (to give a reception in smb.'s honour)
distinction
recognition
4) to win (an) honour
5) to confer an honour on
6) a dubious; great, high honour
7) an honour that + clause (it was a great honour that we were chosen)
8) (to graduate) with honours
privilege
9) to have the honour (may I have the honour of your company?)
10) an honour to + inf. (it was an honour to serve with you)
integrity
reputation
11) to stake one's honour on smt.
12) one's word of honour; an affair of honour
13) on one's (word of) honour
rite
14) to do the honours ('to serve as host')
15) military honours (to be buried with full military honours)
misc.
16) a (military) guard of honour
II
v.
1) (D; tr.) to honour as (she was honoured as a community leader)
2) (D; tr.) to honour with
honour         
(honours, honouring, honoured)
Frequency: The word is one of the 3000 most common words in English.
Note: in AM, use 'honor'
1.
Honour means doing what you believe to be right and being confident that you have done what is right.
I do not believe I can any longer serve with honour as a member of your government.
N-UNCOUNT
2.
An honour is a special award that is given to someone, usually because they have done something good or because they are greatly respected.
He was showered with honours-among them an Oscar.
N-COUNT
3.
If someone is honoured, they are given public praise or an award for something they have done.
Two American surgeons were last week honoured with the Nobel Prize for Medicine and Physiology...
VERB: usu passive, be V-ed
4.
If you describe doing or experiencing something as an honour, you mean you think it is something special and desirable.
Five other cities had been competing for the honour of staging the Games...
N-SING: oft N of -ing, it v-link N to-inf
5.
If you say that you would be honoured to do something, you are saying very politely and formally that you would be pleased to do it. If you say that you are honoured by something, you are saying that you are grateful for it and pleased about it.
Peter Alliss says he would be honoured to be asked...
It's a very flattering offer, and I'm honoured by your confidence in me.
V-PASSIVE: be V-ed to-inf, be V-ed [politeness]
6.
To honour someone means to treat them or regard them with special attention and respect.
Her Majesty later honoured the Headmaster with her presence at lunch...
Those right-wing people who most honour their monarch see no reason for any apology.
VERB: V n with n, V n
honoured
Mrs Patrick Campbell was an honoured guest.
ADJ: ADJ n
7.
If you honour an arrangement or promise, you do what you said you would do.
The two sides agreed to honour a new ceasefire...
VERB: V n
8.
Honours is a type of university degree which is of a higher standard than a pass or ordinary degree.
...an honours degree in business studies.
N-UNCOUNT: usu N n
9.
Judges, and mayors in the United States, are sometimes called your honour or referred to as his honour or her honour.
I bring this up, your honor, because I think it is important to understand the background of the defendant.
N-VOC: poss N; PRON: poss PRON
10.
11.
If someone does the honours at a social occasion or public event, they act as host or perform some official function. (INFORMAL)
A well-known television personality did the honours at the official opening of the show.
PHRASE: V inflects
12.
If something is arranged in honour of a particular event, it is arranged in order to celebrate that event.
The Foundation is holding a dinner at the Museum of American Art in honour of the opening of their new show.
PREP-PHRASE
13.
If something is arranged or happens in someone's honour, it is done specially to show appreciation of them.
He will attend an outdoor concert in his honour in the centre of Paris...
PHRASE: n PHR, PHR after v, PHR with cl
honour         
(US honor)
¦ noun
1. great respect or esteem.
a feeling of pride and pleasure from being shown respect.
a source of esteem.
2. a clear sense of what is morally right.
3. a thing conferred as a distinction.
(honours) a special distinction for proficiency in an examination.
(honours) a course of degree studies more specialized than for an ordinary pass.
4. (His, Your, etc. Honour) a title of respect for a circuit judge, a US mayor, and (in Irish or rustic speech) any person of rank.
5. Golf the right of driving off first, having won the previous hole.
6. dated a woman's chastity.
7. Bridge an ace, king, queen, jack, or ten.
(honours) possession of at least four of these cards in the trump suit, or of all four aces in no trumps, for which a bonus is scored.
¦ verb
1. regard with great respect.
pay public respect to.
2. bring esteem to (a place or event) with one's presence.
3. fulfil (an obligation) or keep (an agreement).
accept (a bill) or pay (a cheque) when due.
Phrases
do the honours informal perform a social duty for others, especially serve food or drink.
honour bright Brit. dated on my honour.
honours are even Brit. there is equality in the contest.
in honour of as an expression of respect for.
on one's honour under a moral obligation.
on (or upon) my honour used to express sincerity.
Origin
ME: from OFr. onor (n.), onorer (v.), from L. honos, honor.

Wikipedia

Honour

Honour (Commonwealth English) or honor (American English; see spelling differences) is the idea of a bond between an individual and a society as a quality of a person that is both of social teaching and of personal ethos, that manifests itself as a code of conduct, and has various elements such as valour, chivalry, honesty, and compassion. It is an abstract concept entailing a perceived quality of worthiness and respectability that affects both the social standing and the self-evaluation of an individual or institutions such as a family, school, regiment, or nation. Accordingly, individuals (or institutions) are assigned worth and stature based on the harmony of their actions with a specific code of honour, and the moral code of the society at large.

Samuel Johnson, in his A Dictionary of the English Language (1755), defined honour as having several senses, the first of which was "nobility of soul, magnanimity, and a scorn of meanness". This sort of honour derives from the perceived virtuous conduct and personal integrity of the person endowed with it. On the other hand, Johnson also defined honour in relationship to "reputation" and "fame"; to "privileges of rank or birth", and as "respect" of the kind which "places an individual socially and determines his right to precedence". This sort of honour is often not so much a function of moral or ethical excellence, as it is a consequence of power. Finally, with respect to sexuality, honour has traditionally been associated with (or identical to) "chastity" or "virginity", or in case of married men and women, "fidelity". Some have argued that honour should be seen more as a rhetoric, or set of possible actions, than as a code.

Examples of use of honour
1. So I sensed that what Roger and I should do was honour the brand, honour the history, honour the classicism.
2. While in Paris, Drnovsek also attended a celebration in honour of acclaimed scientist, anthropologist and UN Ambassador Jane Goodall, who received Frances top honour, the Legion of Honour.
3. She is working on a PhD on honour killings and victims‘ experiences of honour–based violence.
4. Honour crimes increase The document also reported an increasing number of "honour crimes" against women.
5. A small retailer would feel honour–bound to honour the deal.