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⇱ Text - Etymology, Origin & Meaning


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Origin and history of text


text(n.)

late 14c., "the wording of anything written," from Old French texte, Old North French tixte "text, book; Gospels" (12c.), from Medieval Latin textus "the Scriptures; a text, a treatise," earlier, in Late Latin "written account, content, characters used in a document," from Latin textus "style or texture of a work," etymologically "thing woven," from past-participle stem of texere "to weave, to join, fit together, braid, interweave, construct, fabricate, build" (from PIE root *teks- "to weave, to fabricate, to make; make wicker or wattle framework"). 

Also in English from late 14c. more specifically as "an authoritative writing or document; a translated discourse or composition (as opposed to the commentary on it); story, tale, narrative; Christian doctrine; a passage of the Bible (as a proof or a subject of discourse); the letter of the Scriptures," especially in the original language.

Hence, generally, "a subject, theme" (c. 1600), figuratively, from the notion of "where one starts." The meaning "a digital text message" is by 2005.

An ancient metaphor: thought is a thread, and the raconteur is a spinner of yarns — but the true storyteller, the poet, is a weaver. The scribes made this old and audible abstraction into a new and visible fact. After long practice, their work took on such an even, flexible texture that they called the written page a textus, which means cloth. [Robert Bringhurst, "The Elements of Typographic Style"]

To Socrates, a word (the name of a thing) is "an instrument of teaching and of separating reality, as a shuttle is an instrument of separating the web" [Cratylus].

text(v.)

"send a text message by mobile system," 2005; see text (n.). Related: Texted; texting. Formerly it meant "to write in text-hand" (1590s), text letters being a kind of large, uniform writing used by clerks in the text or body of a manuscript (distinguished from the smaller hand used in the notes). Texted (adj.) is attested in early 15c. as "versed in books, learned in texts." Latin agent noun textor meant "a weaver."

Entries linking to text


1969, from hyper- "over, above" + text (n.).

In place of the verbal connectives that are used in normal text, such as topic or transition sentences, hypertext connects nodes ... through links. The primary purpose of a link is to connect one card, node or frame and another card, frame or node that enables the user to jump from one to another. [David H. Jonassen, "Hypertext/hypermedia," 1989]

by 2005, from contraction of sex (n.) + text (v.) in the electronic media sense. Related: Sexted; sexting.

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