: a person who brings a legal action compare defendant
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We won't complain about the origins of plaintiff, although complain and plaintiff are distantly related; both can be traced back to plangere, a Latin word meaning "to strike, beat one's breast, or lament." Plaintiff comes most immediately from Middle English plaintif, itself an Anglo-French borrowing tracing back to plaint, meaning "lamentation." (The English word plaintive is also related.) Logically enough, plaintiff applies to the one who does the complaining in a legal case.
the judge ruled that the plaintiff's lawsuit was groundless, and he dismissed it
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The plaintiffs seek to prevent the board from taking any action in its plan to split the district.—Matthew Adams, Fort Worth Star-Telegram, 4 Mar. 2025 On Friday, the plaintiffs asked Judge Chuang to block DOGE representatives from combing through U.S.A.I.D. data and systems, as a method of short-term relief.—Aishvarya Kavi, New York Times, 2 Mar. 2025 More than a dozen plaintiffs brought claims on Friday alone.—Nancy Dillon, Rolling Stone, 1 Mar. 2025 Last month, the ACLU and its fellow plaintiffs filed another lawsuit against the Trump administration demanding that migrants at Guantánamo be given access to lawyers.—Sacha Pfeiffer, NPR, 1 Mar. 2025 See All Example Sentences for plaintiff
Word History
Etymology
Middle English plaintif, from Anglo-French, from pleintif, adjective
Middle French plaintif, from plaintif, adj., grieving, from plaint lamentation, from Latin planctus, from plangere to strike, beat one's breast, lament
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