Pe*cul"iar , n.
1. That which is peculiar; a sole or exclusive property; a prerogative; a characteristic.
Revenge is . .
. the peculiar of Heaven.
South. 2. (Eng. Canon Law) A particular parish or church which is exempt from the jurisdiction of the ordinary.
Court of Peculiars
(Eng. Law), a branch of the
Court of Arches having cognizance of the affairs of peculiars.
Blackstone. -- Dean of
peculiars. See under
Dean, 1.
Pe*cul"iar (?), a. [L. peculiaris, fr. peculium private property, akin to pecunia money: cf. OF. peculier. See Pecuniary.]
1. One's own; belonging solely or especially to an individual; not possessed by others; of private, personal, or characteristic possession and use; not owned in common or
in participation.
And purify unto himself a peculiar people.
Titus ii. 14.
Hymns . . . that Christianity hath peculiar unto itself.
Hooker. 2. Particular; individual; special; appropriate.
While each peculiar power forgoes his wonted seat.
Milton. My fate is Juno's most
peculiar care.
Dryden.
3. Unusual; singular; rare; strange; as, the sky had a peculiarappearance.
Syn. -- Peculiar,
Special, Especial. Peculiar is from the Roman peculium, which was a thing emphatically and distinctively one's own, and hence was
dear. The former sense always belongs to peculiar (as, a peculiar style, peculiar
manners, etc.), and usually so much of the latter as to
involve feelings of interest; as, peculiar care,
watchfulness, satisfaction, etc. Nothing of this kind belongs to special and especial. They mark simply the relation of species to genus, and denote that there is something in this case more than ordinary; as, a special act of Congress; especial
pains, etc.
Beauty, which, either walking or asleep,
Shot forth peculiar graces.
Milton.
For naught so vile that
on the earth doth live,
But to the earth
some special good doth give.
Shak.