; educate : 1447, from L. educatus, pp. of educare "bring up, rear, educate," which is related to educere "bring out," from ex- "out" + ducere"to lead" (see duke). Meaning "provide schooling" is first attested 1588 in Shakespeare. Educationese "the jargon of school administrators" is from 1966; educrat first attested 1968, usually pejorative, second element from bureaucrat (q.v.). Educable is from 1845. Educated guess first attested 1954.
; educate : 1447, from L. educatus, pp. of educare "bring up, rear, educate," which is related to educere "bring out," from ex- "out" + ducere"to lead" (see duke). Meaning "provide schooling" is first attested 1588 in Shakespeare. Educationese "the jargon of school administrators" is from 1966; educrat first attested 1968, usually pejorative, second element from bureaucrat (q.v.). Educable is from 1845. Educated guess first attested 1954.
the etymology of the word ''cereal'' is from laitin
The etymology of etymology is from the greek etumologia which means "true sense of a word"
No, a thesaurus does not give the etymology of a word. However, the etymology can be found in a dictionary.
No, a thesaurus does not give the etymology of a word. However, the etymology can be found in a dictionary.
What is the etymology of the word persecute its for my language homework
what is the etymology of clement
The etymology of a word is the source from which it was derived.
The word means the history of a linguist form, such as words. So; The etymology of the word salt is Latin in origin. The etymology of the word biology is Greek in origin.
I'd like to know the etymology of that word.
Paisaje is a Spanish word that means landscape. Its etymology is that it is derived from the Latin word pagus.
Root words for Etymology are: etymological etymologically etymologist pseudoetymological pseudoetymologically
The study of word origins is called etymology. In my student days I was told that it is one of the less exact areas of historical linguistics.