ENDORSE
Posted: Wed Oct 26, 2005 9:10 pm
I like the straightforward way this word came to be -- signing on the back of a document to indicate your approval.
It's also kind of neat that it moved from Old French into Old English into Middle Latin.
-Tim
It's also kind of neat that it moved from Old French into Old English into Middle Latin.
Naturally, dossum reminded me of 'dossier'.endorse
1381, from O.Fr. endosser, lit. "to put on back," from en- "put on" + dos "back," from L. dossum, var. of dorsum. Sense of "confirm, approve" (by signing on the back) is first recorded in Eng. 1847. Assimilated in form to M.L. indorsare.
Ironic that one's dossier could have such a profound influence on one's endorsements...dossier
1880, from Fr. dossier "bundle of papers," from dos "back," supposedly because the bundle bore a label on the back, from L. dossum, var. of dorsum "back." Or possibly from resemblance of the bulge in a mass of bundled papers to the curve of a back.
-Tim