petit

[pet-ee; French puh-tee] /ˈpɛt i; French pəˈti/
adjective, Law.
1.
small; petty; minor.
Origin
1325-75; Middle English < Middle French; see petty

ense petit placidam sub libertate quietem

[en-se pe-tit plah-ki-dahm soo b lee-ber-tah-te kwee-ey-tem; English en-see pee-tit plas-i-dam suhb lib-er-tey-tee kwahy-ee-tem] /ˈɛn sɛ ˈpɛ tɪt ˈplɑ kɪˌdɑm sʊb ˌli bɛrˈtɑ tɛ kwiˈeɪ tɛm; English ˈɛn si ˈpi tɪt ˈplæs ɪˌdæm sʌb ˌlɪb ərˈteɪ ti kwaɪˈi tɛm/
Latin.
1.
by the sword she seeks quiet peace under liberty: motto of Massachusetts.
British Dictionary definitions for petit

petit

/ˈpɛtɪ/
adjective
1.
(prenominal) (mainly law) of little or lesser importance; small: petit jury
Word Origin
C14: from Old French: little, of obscure origin

Petit

/French pəti/
noun
1.
Roland (rɔlɑ̃). 1924–2011, French ballet dancer and choreographer. His innovative ballets include Carmen (1949), Kraanerg (1969), and The Blue Angel (1985); he also choreographed films, such as Anything Goes (1956) and Black Tights (1960)
Word Origin and History for petit
adj.

mid-14c., "trifling," from Old French petit "small, little, young, few in numbers" (11c.), probably from stem of Late Latin pitinnus "small," of uncertain origin; it corresponds to no known Latin form and perhaps is from a Celtic root pett- "part, piece, bit" also found in Italian pezza, English piece. Attested as a surname from 1086. Replaced by petty in most usages, except in established forms such as petit bourgeois "conventional middle-class" (1832; used in English by Charlotte Brontë earlier than by Marx or Engels); petit mal (1842, literally "little evil," mild form of epilepsy), and petit four (1884), which in French means "little oven," from Old French four "oven," from Latin furnus.