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  1. Dictionary
    his·to·ry
    /ˈhist(ə)rē/

    noun

    • 1. the study of past events, particularly in human affairs: "medieval European history" Similar the pastformer timeshistorical eventsdays of oldOpposite the future
    • 2. the whole series of past events connected with someone or something: "the history of Aegean painting"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Dec 22, 2012 · That is why feminists, for example, rejected the word history and championed the notion of herstory during the 1970s, says Dictionary.com’s Jane Solomon, “to point out the fact that history has mostly come from a male perspective.” The “his” in history has nothing

  3. Etymology: In Old English < classical Latin historia (in post-classical Latin also istoria (7th or 8th cent.)) (see below); subsequently reborrowed < Anglo-Norman and Old French istorie, estoire, historie, Anglo-Norman and Old French, Middle French estorie, Anglo-Norman and Middle French, French histoire, Old French, Middle French hystoire, Middle French histore account of the events of a ...

  4. Some dictionaries define whoa as Stop! while some define it as an expression of surprise/astonishment. Is there such a word as whoa, where did it originate from and what is its actual meaning?

  5. Oct 20, 2011 · This refers to having a "double period" of history, or two periods in a row. When I went to high school in Australia in the '80s a period was typically 40 mins, with 8 per day. Double, and occasionally triple, periods were scheduled to allow for a longer uninterrupted block of teaching time.

  6. The editorial bears the heading, "McDonald and Lenin," and he Times puts itself on the wrong side of history thus: "If the British people regard the advent of Labor Socialists without alarm, on reason is that they know that they have to deal with a Labor government soberly aware of its limitations and its responsibilities...The example of Russia is a virtual guarantee against any tendency on ...

  7. Apr 4, 2015 · The potted history of P-values, at least when told by certain sorts of Bayesians, is that they were an invention of R. A. Fisher that set scientific inference on the wrong basis for the better part of a century. For instance, Nate Silver spends a whole chapter on this potted history in his recent book.

  8. So quarter goes from meaning to divide into four portions, its plain Latin origin, to meaning either one of those four portions, or to divide into portions generally. From the idea of those four portions, it comes to mean any portion.

  9. Jan 2, 2013 · It says the word is black slang from the 1920s. The definition is placed in the entry for booty meaning treasure. My understanding is that booty means buttocks, as explained at dictionary.com. Which slang meaning came first? Buttocks or the female form as a sex object? Also, can anyone explain the jump from treasure to buttocks?

  10. Jun 30, 2011 · Another oft-repeated phrase of similar meaning can be found in a sermon by John Needham from 1709: 1712: "Well! more ways may be found than one, To kill a Witch that Will not drown." Although used literally, this humorous poem called The Fair Nun, A Tale by Elijah Fenton was reprinted many times in the 18th and 19th centuries, the earliest I found from 1712 .

  11. Nov 29, 2015 · The meaning of the quotation, I think, is essentially as A.P. puts it in a separate answer: History is cultural memory, and the loss of knowledge of one's history destroys one's sense of community and shared identity, casting one adrift in the present without meaningful reference points from the past.

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