HOME | Contact | Links

Proudly Hosted by JaguarPC.com

***

 

 

Etymology Dictionary

Origin of the word ANNOUNCE.  Etymology of the word ANNOUNCE.

From An Etymology Dictionary of the English Language, by Walter W. Skeat, 1893.

 

ANNOUNCE,  to make known to.  (F.,—L.)   Milton has announc'd, P. R. iv. 504.   [Chaucer has annunciat, C. T. 15501, but this is directly from Lat. pp. annunciatus.]—F. annoncer, to announce; Cot.—Lat. annunciare, annuntiare, to announce; pp. annunciatus.—Lat. ad (= an- before n); and nunciare, nuntiare, to report, give a message.—Lat. nuncius, nuntius, a messenger.   The earlier form seems to be nuntius; Peile, Gk. and Lat. Etym. 2nd ed. p. 246; which probably stands, according to Corssen, for nouentius, a bringer of news, from nouēre*, a nominal verb formed from nouos (nouus), new; id. p. 378.   See New.   Der. announce-ment; and, directly from the Latin, annunciate, annunciat-ion.

***


***

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

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.

  

 

not indexed yet

Copyright © 20kWeb.com. All rights reserved.