Made

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Old English macian, of West Germanic origin, from a base meaning ‘fitting’; related to match1.


文件:Ety img made.png

wiktionary

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From Middle English mathe, from Old English maþu, maþa(“maggot, worm, grub”), from Proto-Germanic *maþô(“maggot”), from Proto-Indo-European *mot-, *mat-(“worm, grub, caterpillar, moth”). Cognate with Scots mathe, maithe(“maggot”), Dutch made(“maggot”), German Made(“maggot”). More at maggot.

From Middle English made, makede, makode(preterite) and maad, mad, maked(past participle), from Old English macode(first and third person preterite) and macod, gemacode, ġemacod(past participle), from macian(“to make”). More at make.


etymonline

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made (adj.)

late 14c., "created, wrought, fabricated, constructed" (of words, stories, etc.), from Middle English maked, from Old English macod "made," past participle of macian "to make" (see make (v.)). From 1570s as "artificially produced, formed independently of natural development."

To be a made man "placed beyond the reach of want, assured of reward or success" is in Marlowe's "Faust" (1590). To have it made (1955) is American English colloquial. Made-to-order (adj.) "made according to the customer's specifications" is by 1905 in advertisements, from the verbal phrase. Grose's dictionary of slang and cant (1785) has for this word a tart definition: "MADE. Stolen. Cant."

Made up (adj.) in earliest use was "consummate, accomplished" (c. 1600), but this is obsolete. As "put together from parts from various sources" it is by 1670s. As "artificially prepared for the purpose of deception," by 1773. Of minds, "settled, decided," by 1788.