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surety (n.)

c. 1300, seurte, "a guarantee, promise, pledge or assurance," from Old French seurté "a promise, pledge, guarantee; assurance, confidence" (12c., Modern French sûreté), from Latin securitatem (nominative securitas) "freedom from care or danger, safety, security," from securus (see secure (adj.)).

It is attested from late 14c. as "security, safety, stability; state of peace," also "subjective certainty, certitude; confidence." It is attested from early 15c. as "property, money, etc. deposited as a pledge of fulfilling an obligation or as security against loss or damage," and by mid-15c. as "one who makes himself responsible for another." Until 1966, the French national criminal police department was the Sûreté nationale.

also from c. 1300
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Trends of surety

updated on October 23, 2023

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