Siege

/siːdʒ/ noun

A siege is a military attack in which an army surrounds a town, castle, or city to cut off supplies and force it to surrender. It usually lasts a long time.

“Siege” comes from Old French “sege” or “siège,” meaning seat or sitting, from Latin “sedere,” to sit. It originally referred to a seat or session, then to the act of sitting down before a place in order to attack it over time. The idea of ‘sitting around’ a city turned into a technical military term.

AFbeleg
AMውስጥ መያዝ
ARحصار
BGобсада
BNঅবরোধ
CAsetge
CSobléhání
DAbelejring
DEBelagerung
ELπολιορκία
ESasedio
ETpiiramine
📖 Full word page — etymology, 47 translations, audio 🔑 Get Free API Key — 50 lookups/day 📚 Read the Docs — integrate Word Orb