FORUM, Forum Discussion, Forum Gratuit, Nom de domaine, Nom de domaine gratuit, Redirection gratuite,

Forum Imperfect Creations Administrators :Waffle Bob
Forum Imperfect Creations
Not logged | Login
Online:2 guests are browsing the forum
Register Register | Profile Profile | Private messages Private messages | Search Search | Online Online | Help Help | Create a free blog

forum Forum index forumCommunication forumWord History: Ditto

Author : Topic: Word History: Ditto  Bottom
 Waffle Bob
 admin
 Posts : 539
 The meeting of two personalities
is like the contact of two
chemical substances: if there is
any reaction, both are
transformed. -Carl Jung
 Waffle Bob
  Posted 27/03/2007 08:12:12 PM
Send a private message to Waffle Bob
Word History: Ditto, which at first glance seems a handy and insignificant sort of word, actually has a Roman past, for it comes from dictus, "having been said," the past participle of the verb dīcere, "to say." In Italian dīcere became dire and dictus became detto, or in the Tuscan dialect ditto. Italian detto or ditto meant what said does in English, as in the locution "the said story." Thus the word could be used in certain constructions to mean "the same as what has been said"; for example, having given the date December 22, one could use 26 detto or ditto for 26 December. The first recorded use of ditto in English occurs in such a construction in 1625. The sense "copy" is an English development, first recorded in 1818. Ditto has even become a trademark for a duplicating machine.

~ t c e f r e p m i ~

forum Forum index forumCommunication forumWord History: Ditto
top
Go to :
  Add a quick reply

Add a quick reply