Petit \Pet"it\, a. [F. See {Petty}.] Small; little; insignificant; mean; -- Same as {Petty}. [Obs., except in legal language.]
By what small, petit hints does the mind catch hold of and recover a vanishing notion. --South.
{Petit constable}, an inferior civil officer, subordinate to the high constable.
{Petit jury}, a jury of twelve men, impaneled to try causes at the bar of a court; -- so called in distinction from the grand jury.
{Petit larceny}, the stealing of goods of, or under, a certain specified small value; -- opposed to grand larceny. The distinction is abolished in England.
{Petit ma[^i]tre}. [F., lit., little master.] A fop; a coxcomb; a ladies' man. --Goldsmith.
{Petit serjeanty} (Eng. Law), the tenure of lands of the crown, by the service of rendering annually some implement of war, as a bow, an arrow, a sword, a flag, etc.
{Petit treason}, formerly, in England, the crime of killing a person to whom the offender owed duty or subjection, as one's husband, master, mistress, etc. The crime is now not distinguished from murder.
Gladiolas towered over an array of petit fours, champagne, Grand Marnier and other delicacies.
The highest price paid for any work so far this auction season was the $7.7 million fetched by Fernand Leger's "Le petit dejeuner" at Christie's Tuesday.
To be a petit matre is to be matre none the less. Now, with Boudin at Trouville, we have another artist of this category and quality, and an exhibition as exquisite as any them.
His conception did not include petit dejeuner tete-a-tete.
His lips curl ready for a really big insult: 'It's petit bourgeois.' His strategy has succeeded in some sectors.