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Etymology Dictionary

Origin of the word OF. Etymology of the word OF.

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

 

OF,  from, belonging to, among.  (E.)   M.E. of; passim.—A.S. of, of; Grein, ii. 308. + Du., Icel., Swed., Dan., and Goth. af. + G. ab; O.H.G. aba. + Lat. ab. + Gk. ἀπό. + Skt. apa, away.   β. Apparently an instrumental case from a base AP.   From the same base we have the gen. case appearing in Gk. ἄψ, back again, Lat. abs, away from; also the locative case appearing in Gk. ὲπί, Lat. ob, near to.   Also Lat. apud, near, at.   γ. The E. off is merely another spelling of of; see Off.   δ. A comparative form occurs in E. after (= of-ter); see After.   And see A- (6), Ab-, Apo-, Ob-, Epi-.

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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

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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