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139 entries found
zephyr (n.)
mid-14c., from Old English
Zefferus
, from Latin
Zephyrus
(source also of French
zéphire
, Spanish
zefiro
, Italian
zeffiro
), from Greek
Zephyros
"the west wind" (sometimes personified as a god), probably related to
zophos
"the west, the dark region, darkness, gloom." Extended sense of "mild breeze" is c. 1600. Related:
Zephyrean
.
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zeppelin (n.)
1900, from German
Zeppelin
, short for
Zeppelinschiff
"Zeppelin ship," after Count Ferdinand von
Zeppelin
(1838-1917), German general who perfected its design. Compare
blimp
. Related:
Zeppelinous
.
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zero (v.)
in
zero in
, 1944, from
zero
(n.); the image is from instrument adjustment to a setting of "zero" (1909 in this sense, originally in rifle-shooting). Related:
Zeroed
;
zeroing
.
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zero (n.)
"figure which stands for naught in the Arabic notation," also "the absence of all quantity considered as quantity," c. 1600, from French
zéro
or directly from Italian
zero
, from Medieval Latin
zephirum
, from Arabic
sifr
"cipher," translation of Sanskrit
sunya-m
"empty place, desert, naught" (see
cipher
(n.)).
A brief history of the invention of "zero" can be found
here
. Meaning "worthless person" is recorded from 1813. As an adjective from 1810.
Zero tolerance
first recorded 1972, originally U.S. political language.
Zero-sum
in game theory is from 1944 (von Neumann), indicating that if one player wins X amount the other or others must lose X amount.
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zest (n.)
1670s, from French
zeste
"piece of orange or lemon peel used as a flavoring," of unknown origin. Sense of "thing that adds flavor" is 1709; that of "keen enjoyment" first attested 1791.
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zestful (adj.)
1797, from
zest
+
-ful
. Related:
Zestfully
;
zestfulness
.
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zesty (adj.)
1789, from
zest
+
-y
(2). Related:
Zestily
;
zestiness
.
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zeta (n.)
sixth letter of the Greek alphabet; see
zed
.
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zetetic (adj.)
"proceeding by inquiry," 1640s, from Modern Latin
zeteticus
, from Greek
zetetikos
"searching, inquiring," from
zetetos
, verbal adjective of
zetein
"seek for, inquire into." Related:
Zetetical
.
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zeugma (n.)
1580s, "a single word (usually a verb or adjective) made to refer to two or more nouns in a sentence" (but properly applying to only one of them), from Greek
zeugma
, "a zeugma; that which is used for joining; boat bridge," literally "a yoking," from
zeugnynai
"to yoke" (from PIE root
*yeug-
"to join").
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