Honor
1hon•or \ˈä-nər\ noun
[Middle English, from Anglo-French onur, honur, from Latin honos, honor] 13th century
1 a: good name or public esteem: REPUTATION
b: a showing of usually merited respect: RECOGNITION 〈pay honor to our founder〉
2: PRIVILEGE 〈had the honor of joining the captain for dinner〉
3: a person of superior standing—now used especially as a title for a holder of high office 〈if Your Honor please〉
4: one whose worth brings respect or fame: CREDIT 〈an honor to the profession〉
hu•mil•i•ty \hyü-ˈmi-lə-tē, yü-\ noun
14th century: the quality or state of being humble
1hum•ble \ˈhəm-bəl also chiefly Southern ˈəm-\ adjective
hum•bler \-b(ə-)lər\; hum•blest \-b(ə-)ləst\ [Middle English, from Anglo-French, from Latin humilis low, humble, from humus earth; akin to Greek chthōn earth, chamai on the ground] 13th century
1: not proud or haughty: not arrogant or assertive
2: reflecting, expressing, or offered in a spirit of deference or submission 〈a humble apology〉
3 a: ranking low in a hierarchy or scale: INSIGNIFICANT, UNPRETENTIOUS
b: not costly or luxurious 〈a humble contraption〉—hum•ble•ness \-bəl-nəs\ noun—hum•bly \-blē\ adverb