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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
dependant
noun
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Also note that if your partner earns more than £21.40 the adult dependants increase will not be payable for her or him.
▪ However, you do not receive an increment for any week when you or a dependant are receiving another national insurance benefit.
▪ She has no dependants and is now ineligible for advice and assistance.
▪ The employers pay the whole cost of the benefits for employees and their dependants.
▪ The word dependant will not be used in this way as a noun.
▪ They would be able to claim benefit in their own right and for their husbands as their dependants.
▪ Your life expectancy is another consideration, as is that of your partner and any dependants.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Dependant

Dependant \De*pend"ant\, Dependance \De*pend"ance\, n., Dependancy \De*pend"an*cy\, n. See Dependent, Dependence, Dependency.

Note: The forms dependant, dependance, dependancy are from the French; the forms dependent, etc., are from the Latin. Some authorities give preference to the form dependant when the word is a noun, thus distinguishing it from the adjective, usually written dependent.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
dependant

also dependent, late 14c.; of persons, from 1580s, from French dépendant (adjective and noun), properly present participle of dépendre "to hang down," also "to depend," from Latin dependentem (see depend).\n

\nAs a noun, from early 15c., originally "action growing out of another action." As with its relative dependence, the Latin-influenced variant (in this case dependent) co-existed through 18c., but with this word the French spelling has proven more durable in English, possibly because it has been found convenient to keep both, one (dependant) for the noun, the other (dependent) for the adjective.

Wiktionary
dependant

a. (obsolete spelling of dependent English) n. 1 (context British English) A person who depends on another for support, particularly financial support (= US dependent). 2 (context US English) (misspelling of dependent English)

WordNet
dependant
  1. adj. contingent on something else [syn: dependent, qualified]

  2. addicted to a drug [syn: dependent, drug-addicted, hooked, strung-out]

  3. n. a person who relies on another person for support (especially financial support) [syn: dependent]

Wikipedia
Dependant

A dependant (British English) or dependent (American English) is a person who relies on another as a primary source of income. For example, a minor child, under the age of majority, is a dependant of his or her parent. However, a common-law husband or a wife who has been maintained by their partner may also be included in this definition. The existence of the dependant may enable the provider, such as a parent or guardian, to claim a deduction, for example in income tax calculations.

In the UK, a full-time student in higher education, and with an adult who depends upon them, may be eligible for an 'Adult Dependant's Grant' in addition to other student finance they may be in receipt of.

Usage examples of "dependant".

Their fortune had created many dependants in that assembly, their merit had acquired many friends.

This multitude of abject dependants was interested in the support of the actual government from the dread of a revolution, which might at once confound their hopes and intercept the reward of their services.

By a single edict, he reduced the palace of Constantinople to an immense desert, and dismissed with ignominy the whole train of slaves and dependants, without providing any just, or at least benevolent, exceptions, for the age, the services, or the poverty, of the faithful domestics of the Imperial family.

Roman armies, soon filled Constantinople with his troops, and distributed among his dependants the honors and rewards of the empire.

Under the Roman empire, the wealth and jurisdiction of the bishops, their sacred character, and perpetual office, their numerous dependants, popular eloquence, and provincial assemblies, had rendered them always respectable, and sometimes dangerous.

I believe as a first step that I and a few of my, ah, dependants should visit Queen Laurie.

As to how it might be done: I would quietly deliver you and your dependants to Cherry Lane after dark has fallen.

If Irnan succeeded in her revolt, and other stable populations, those who supplied the food and commodities to support the vast army of Farers, should join with her in emigrating to freer worlds, all the dependants of the Lords Protector would be left destitute and the whole order would be destroyed.

The fidelity of the latter dependant had moved the baronet to commit to him a portion of the management of the Raynham estate, and this Adrian did not like.

Had he not everything which fathers want for portionless daughters, and uncles for dependant nieces?

As the Signor addressed himself to Mademoiselle de Rubine, there was an air of respectful tenderness in his deportment which did not elude the observation of her aunt, who would probably have felt somewhat mortified at the preference thus evidently shewn to her dependant, had not the conversation of the Marchese been chiefly directed to herself.

Being indulged in this request, he recommended it in terms of rapture to all his friends and dependants, and, by dint of unwearied solicitation, procured a very ample subscription for the author.

Being indulged in this request, he recommended it in terms of rapture to all his friends and dependants, and, by dint of unwearied solicitation, procured a very ample subscription for the author.

Diana and Mary were soon to leave Moor House, and return to the far different life and scene which awaited them, as governesses in a large, fashionable, south-of-England city, where each held a situation in families by whose wealthy and haughty members they were regarded only as humble dependants, and who neither knew nor sought out their innate excellences, and appreciated only their acquired accomplishments as they appreciated the skill of their cook or the taste of their waiting-woman.

Next after him went Doubt, who was ycladIn a discolour'd cote, of straunge disguyse,That at his backe a brode Capuccio had,And sleeues dependant Albanese-wyse:He lookt askew with his mistrustfull eyes,And nicely trode, as thornes lay in his way,Or that the flore to shrinke he did auyse,And on a broken reed he still did stayHis feeble steps, which shrunke, when hard theron he lay.