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Word of the day oxford
Word of the day oxford












The dates beside a word indicate the earliest year for which there is a surviving written record of that word (in English, unless otherwise indicated). Etymologies are not definitions they're explanations of what our words meant and how they sounded 600 or 2,000 years ago. This is a map of the wheel-ruts of modern English. Similar formations to UNDERSTAND, and with similar senses, are found in Old Frisian (understonda) and Middle Danish (understande), while other Germanic languages use compounds meaning "stand before," such as German verstehen, represented in Old English by forstanden "understand," also "oppose, withstand." The Middle English ambivalence of for-, which also could mean "action that results in failure, or produces adverse or opposite results" might have discouraged its use.įor the concept in our UNDERSTAND, most Indo-European languages are said to use figurative extensions of compounds that literally mean "put together," or "separate" (as in intelligence or discern, literally in Latin "to separate," thus "distinguish, perceive"), or "take, grasp," as in comprehend.Ĭomprehend, another "understand" word, is a Latin compound seemingly meaning "seize or take in the mind," but the sense of the com- in it is unclear and perhaps only means "completely." The prehendere is "to catch hold of, seize."Ī Latin "over-standing" compound, however, gave us the enemy-word of understanding, superstition: Latin superstitio "dread of the supernatural, religious belief based on fear or ignorance and considered incompatible with truth or reason." It is literally "a standing over," from superstare "stand on or over." There are many theories to explain the Latin sense development, but none has yet been generally accepted de Vaan suggests the sense is "cause to remain in existence." Old English also had oferstandan (Middle English overstonden), literally "over-stand," but it seem to have been used only in literal senses.

word of the day oxford

UNDERSTAND is recorded occasionally in Middle English in a literal sense: "to occupy space at a lower level" (late 14c.) and, figuratively, "to submit." For "to stand under" in a physical sense, Old English had undergestandan. Perhaps the ultimate sense in UNDERSTAND is "be close to " compare Greek epistamai "I know how, I know," literally "I stand upon." The same survival in English might also provide the sense in the old expression under the (or these) circumstances.įor sense, compare the parallel word in French, entreprendre "to undertake, take in hand" (the source of our enterprise), the first element of which is entre "between, among." Likewise intelligence "faculty of understanding, comprehension" is a Latin compound with inter "between" (and legere "choose, pick out, read").īut other sources allow that the Old English UNDER also had extended senses of "among, between, before, in the presence of." "Among" seems to be the sense of it in many Old English compounds that resemble understand, such as underniman "to receive," undersecan "examine, investigate, scrutinize" ("underseek"), underðencan "consider, change one's mind" ("underthink"), underginnan "to begin."

word of the day oxford

Such a survival also might explain the under in undertake. Some who have studied it think there might have been a second preposition under surviving in the language, from a Germanic form of the ancient reconstructed Proto-Indo-European word (*enter "between, among") that also became Greek enter and Latin inter. One guess about the compound is that the notion is less "standing under" and more "standing in the midst of" (truth, facts, meaning, etc.). For understand, in Middle English, we also get understont, understounde, unþurstonde, onderstonde, hunderstonde, oundyrston, wonderstande, urdenstonden, and others. In general, the more different ways Middle English scribes spelled a word, the less sure they were of its derivation. My guess is that the image was confusing already by Middle English.

word of the day oxford

Likewise the sense has not shifted since King Alfred's day: "to comprehend, grasp the idea of, receive from a word or words or from a sign the idea it is intended to convey to view in a certain way."īut what does "standing beneath" have to do with any of that? If that is what we are thought to do.

word of the day oxford

In form it is a compound of under + stand (v.), and it has been so since Old English. Understand is so plainly odd that even people who don't think about word histories notice it. SUPERSTITIOUS UNDERSTANDING Etymology's joke on us is that our very words that mean "grasp an idea of, mentally fit together parts of reality" - are themselves obscure or incomprehensible to us.














Word of the day oxford