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Etymology
Dictionary
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Origin of the word ABET. Etymology of the word
ABET.
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From An Etymology
Dictionary of the English Language, by Walter W. Skeat, 1893 |
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ABET,
to incite. (F.,Scand.) Used by Shak. Com. of Errors,
ii. 2. 172. [Earlier, the M.E. abet is a sb., meaning
'instigation;' Chaucer, Troilus, ii. 357.]O.F. abeter, to deceive (Burguy); abet, instigation, deceit; cf. Low
Lat. abettum, excitement, instigation.O.F. a- = Lat. ad, to; and beter, to bait: cf. 'ung ours,
quant il est bien betez' = a bear, when he is well baited; Roquefort.Icel.
beita, to bait, chase with dogs, set dogs on; lit. 'to make to bite;'
causal verb from bíta, to bite. See Bait;
and see Bet. Der. abett-or,
Shak. Lucrece, 886. ¶ The sense of O.F. abeter is not
well explained in Burguy, nor is the sense of beter clearly made out by
Roquefort; abeter no doubt had the sense of 'instigate,' as in
English. Burguy wrongly refers the etym. to A.S. bǽtan, instead of
the corresponding Icel. beita.
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| Etymology
Dictionary Index |
| A, B,
C, D, E,
F, G, H,
I, J, K,
L, M, N,
O, P, Q,
R, S, T,
U, V, W,
X, Y, Z
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| Key |
| Arab.=Arabic. |
| A.S.=Anglo
Saxon. |
| Bavar.=Bavarian |
| Bohem.=Bohemian. |
| C.=Celtic,
used as a general term for Irish, Gaelic, Welsh, Breton,
Cornish, &c. |
| Corn.=Cornish. |
| Dan.=Danish. |
| Du.=Dutch |
| E.=English. |
| E.E.=Early
English. |
| Europ.=European. |
| F.=French. |
| G.=German. |
| Gk.=Greek. |
| Goth.=Gothic. |
| Icel.=Icelandic. |
| Ital.=Italian. |
| L. or
Lat.=Latin. |
| Lith.
& Lithuan.=Lithuanian. |
| M.E.=Middle
English. |
| M.F.=Middle
French |
| M.H.G.=Middle
High German. |
| Norw.=Norwegian. |
| O.F.=Old
French. |
| O.H.G.=Old
High German. |
| Pers.=Persian. |
| Port.=Portuguese. |
| Scand.=Scandinavian,
used as a general term for Icelandic, Swedish, Danish,
&c. |
| Sc.=Scottish. |
| Skt.=Sanskrit. |
| Span.=Spanish. |
| Swed.=Sweish. |
| Teut.=Teutonic |
| Turk.=Turkish. |
| W.=Welsh. |
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