borrowed from Middle French, "accord, arrangement, plot," going back to Old French, "crowd, press, meeting, company," of obscure origin
Note:
Compare also medieval Picard conploit "understanding among a group of people, agreement," complote "crowd, press of combatants in a battle." Französisches etymologisches Wörterbuch points to a substitution of pelote "ball (as of yarn, ribbon, etc.)" for complote in a manuscript of the twelfth century Roman d'Alixandre and suggests that behind complote is a hypothetical *compeloter "to form into a ball"—however, evidence for such a verb is lacking.
Verb
borrowed from Middle French comploter, derivative of complot "accord, arrangement, plot" — more at complot entry 1
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