A few days ago
farah_727rash

Can anyone tell me what Latin word “charm” originates from?

Can anyone tell me what Latin word “charm” originates from?

Top 3 Answers
A few days ago
Woodpecker

Favorite Answer

c.1300, from O.Fr. charme “incantation,” from L. carmen “song, verse, enchantment,” from canere “to sing” (see chant), with dissimilation of -n- to -r- before -m-. The notion is of chanting or reciting verses of magical power. Sense of “pleasing quality” first recorded 1598. Meaning “small trinket fastened to a watch-chain, etc.” first recorded 1865.
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A few days ago
FALL
CHARM: (魅力,魔力)In its original form in Latin, this word came from the verb canere, meaning “to sing”. This use prompted its eventual application as the Latin noun carmen, meaning a “song”, which in early European cultures often was linked to magic chants and other superstitious activities. In Middle English, this ended up as charme, a spoken or sung form of magic, and eventually referred to a physical object that had magical properties. The English word “chant” shares this origin; in Latin, one form of the verb canere is cantare.
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A few days ago
Anonymous
From a politician. It was later changed to lie, then to dupe.
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