Tantamount comes from the Anglo-French phrase tant amunter, meaning "to amount to as much." This phrase comes from the Old French tant, meaning "so much" or "as much," and amounter, meaning "to ascend" or "to add up to." When tantamount first entered English, it was used similarly to the Anglo-French phrase, as a verb meaning "to be equivalent." "His not denying tant-amounteth to the affirming of the matter," wrote clergyman Thomas Fuller in 1659, for example. There was also a noun tantamount in the 17th century, but the adjective is the only commonly used form of the term nowadays.
Example Sentences
His statement was tantamount to an admission of guilt. They see any criticism of the President as tantamount to treason.
Recent Examples on the WebDenying elections is tantamount to rejecting democracy itself. Abdul El-sayed, The New Republic, 16 Sep. 2022 Hungry for information that might lead to the capture of other al-Qaida figures, CIA operatives subjected them to enhanced interrogation techniques that were tantamount to torture, human rights groups say. Larry Neumeister, Chron, 11 Sep. 2022 Ban advocates say parents have the right to oversee their kids' instruction and that raising gender and sexuality are tantamount to proselytizing to students over their families' wishes. Arthur Jones Ii, ABC News, 30 Aug. 2022 Growing up, the Jamaica Queens, New York native learned early on that the power of quick wit and crafty word play was tantamount to survival in her neighborhood. Jasmine Browley, Essence, 14 Aug. 2022 China and its companies have denied such a threat exists and warned Western nations that comments on its rights record are tantamount to interference its in internal affairs. Simone Mccarthy, CNN, 26 July 2022 Some hawkish Republican critics of Biden argue that doing just enough to prevent Ukrainian defeat may be tantamount to defeat. Ishaan Tharoor, Washington Post, 8 July 2022 After all, digital transformation has long become tantamount to business transformation, and all commerce has become digital. Denis Clifford, Forbes, 10 June 2022 Questions directed at the would-be Supreme Court justice were, according to Russell, tantamount to race-baiting. Matt Williams, The Conversation, 4 Apr. 2022 See More
Word History
Etymology
obsolete tantamount, noun, equivalent, from Anglo-French tant amunter to amount to as much