uttering

[ uht-er-ing ]
/ ˈʌt ər ɪŋ /

noun Law.

the crime of knowingly tendering or showing a forged instrument or counterfeit coin to another with intent to defraud.

Origin of uttering

Middle English word dating back to 1350–1400; see origin at utter1, -ing1

Definition for uttering (2 of 2)

utter 1
[ uht-er ]
/ ˈʌt ər /

verb (used with object)

verb (used without object)

to employ the faculty of speech; use the voice to talk, make sounds, etc.: His piety prevented him from uttering on religion.
to sustain utterance; undergo speaking: Those ideas are so dishonest they will not utter.

Origin of utter

1
1350–1400; Middle English outren (see out, -er6); cognate with German äussern to declare

OTHER WORDS FROM utter

ut·ter·a·ble, adjective ut·ter·er, noun ut·ter·less, adjective un·ut·tered, adjective

WORDS THAT MAY BE CONFUSED WITH utter

udder utter

Example sentences from the Web for uttering

British Dictionary definitions for uttering (1 of 2)

utter 1
/ (ˈʌtə) /

verb

to give audible expression to (something) to utter a growl
criminal law to put into circulation (counterfeit coin, forged banknotes, etc)
(tr) to make publicly known; publish to utter slander
obsolete to give forth, issue, or emit

Derived forms of utter

utterable, adjective utterableness, noun utterer, noun utterless, adjective

Word Origin for utter

C14: probably originally a commercial term, from Middle Dutch ūteren (modern Dutch uiteren) to make known; related to Middle Low German ūtern to sell, show

British Dictionary definitions for uttering (2 of 2)

utter 2
/ (ˈʌtə) /

adjective

(prenominal) (intensifier) an utter fool; utter bliss; the utter limit

Word Origin for utter

C15: from Old English utera outer, comparative of ūte out (adv); related to Old High German ūzaro, Old Norse ūtri