:''Coward redirects here. You may be looking for
Coward, South Carolina, or for the playwright
Noel Coward.''
'Cowardice' is a
vice that is conventionally viewed as the corruption of
prudence, to thwart all
courage or
bravery. Cowardice may be considered to be prudence that does not take consequences to their furthest extent.
Etymology
According to the ''
Online Etymology Dictionary'', the word "coward" comes from an
Old French word ''coart'', a combination of the word for "tail" and an agent
noun suffix. It would therefore have meant "one with a tail" — perhaps one in the habit of turning it, or it may be derived from a
dog's habit of putting its tail between its legs when it is afraid. Another more clearly related word, in old French, that can be related to coward is "couard" which literally means coward and was frequently used by French knights in battle. It is therefore possible that the English language was enriched in such manner through military contacts with the French, or with the French-influenced
Normans that invaded England in 1066.
The
English surname Coward (as in
Noel Coward), however, has the same origin and meaning as the word "cowherd".
Legal definition
As a legal definition, according to Subchapter X, Section 899, Article 99
[1] of the
United States Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ), cowardice is defined as:
★ Running away from an
enemy;
★ Abandoning, surrendering or otherwise fleeing any post that the soldier is tasked with defending;
★ Endangering the safety of any post that the soldier is responsible for through disobedience, neglect or willful misconduct while in combat;
★ Discarding arms or
ammunition while in combat;
★ Abandoning combat to plunder or loot or commit other crimes;
★ Willfully failing to do all within the soldier's power to fight or defend when it is his duty to do so, while in combat;
★ Refusing to give any needed aid or relief to fellow troops while in combat; or
★ Performing other unspecified acts of "cowardly conduct" while in combat.
According to the UCMJ, the maximum punishment for cowardice is the
death penalty. Cowardice can, by definition, only be charged during a time of and in an area of
armed conflict.
See also
★
Fear
★
Anxiety
★
Shaolin Monastery
★
Virtue
★
Anonymous Coward
★
Shot at Dawn Memorial
★
Jack McCall
★
Robert Ford