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  1. 3 days ago · turn up. (v.) "arrive, make an appearance," especially casually or unexpectedly, by 1755, from the verbal phrase; see turn (v.) + up (adv.). Perhaps a reference to playing cards, but the phrase also was used 18c. in reference to passages of Scripture. also from 1755.

    • Form

      late 14c., name for the god of dreams in Ovid, son of Sleep,...

    • Superstitious Understanding

      Etymology's joke on us is that our very words that mean...

    • Mandrake Roots

      But having once done business with Dictionary dot com, I can...

    • Nice

      late 14c., "deranged, insane;" also "foolish, silly,...

    • The Paragraph

      Etymology Entomology. June 17, 2024 at 4:05 pm; IS A...

  2. 2 days ago · talk turkey. (v.) "get down to business, speak frankly," 1824, American English colloquial; the image, if there is one, is not explained in early usage. Said by 1860 to be from a joke or tale of an attempt to swindle a Native in dividing up a turkey and a less-appealing bird as food. The one-sided compromises (?) proposed by the South by way of ...

  3. 6 days ago · Web resources. David Crystal is a British linguist who has authored, co-authored and edited over 120 books, many of which are focused on linguistics and the English language. He has made PDFs of many of his works available on his website. ELiX is a virtual venue dedicated to cross-linguistic issues of European civilization (especially on ...

  4. 5 days ago · Etymology: from the Proto-Indo-European *wedʰ- (to bind, secure, pledge, guarantee, lead) [source]. Words from the same roots include gage, wage, wager and wed in English, Wette (bet) in German, and gage (pledge, guarantee, deposit) in French [source]. Old Irish (Goídelc) mám [maːm] = yoke.

  5. 4 days ago · The following is for a Person’s Name. But similar prompts would be useful for: geographical gazetteer etymology of a Place, or; key historical (local, national, global) events that would impact a person’s timeline. Analyze the name ‘[Full Name]’ (provide both in original script and Western alphabet if applicable) and offer insights on:

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Hebrew_BibleHebrew Bible - Wikipedia

    1 day ago · The Hebrew Bible developed during the Second Temple Period, as the Jews decided which religious texts were of divine origin; the Masoretic Text, compiled by the Jewish scribes and scholars of the Early Middle Ages, comprises the Hebrew and Aramaic 24 books that they considered authoritative. [2]

  7. 5 days ago · According to the Online Etymology Dictionary (OED), the idea of false or misleading information, as misinformation is defined, dates back to the 16th century . For its part, the Wellcome Trust, a UK foundation, has reported that throughout the 17th century, accounts of whether demonic possessions were misinformation or not abounded, and drove ...

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