O.E. husbonda "male head of a household," probably from O.N. husbondi "master of the house."
Latin implicāre
1664, 'organic structure/organization' from 1413, MidLatin organizare, 'organ' instrument/organ'
From 1567, Middle French manufactura, from Latin manu, ablative of manus 'hand', factura, past perfect of facere 'to perform'
“husband and wife live together but file separately. both are itemizing deductions. husband pays mortgage and r/e taxes. house in both names. does the mortgage interest and r/e taxes have to be split if all paid by husband or is husband entitled to take full deduction.”
it depends on what kind of a husband he is.
The etymology of etymology is from the greek etumologia which means "true sense of a word"
what is the etymology of cortex
Etymology is the opposite of Antipodes
what is the etymology of clement
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.
"Etymology" comes from the Greek word "etymologia," which is derived from "etymon," meaning "true sense," and "logia," meaning "study of." It refers to the study of the origin of words and how their meanings have evolved over time.
The etymology of art is the history of art
The etymology of a word is the source from which it was derived.
Etymology is the study of words and their origins.
the etymology of the word ''cereal'' is from laitin
Well Etymology is the study of words and their roots.