Meditate

来自Big Physics

google

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mid 16th century: from Latin meditat- ‘contemplated’, from the verb meditari, from a base meaning ‘measure’; related to mete1.


Ety img meditate.png

wiktionary

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From Latin meditatus, past participle of meditari(“to think or reflect upon, consider, design, purpose, intend”), in form as if frequentative of mederi(“to heal, to cure, to remedy”); in sense and in form near to Greek μελετῶ(meletô, “to care for, attend to, study, practise, etc.”)


etymonline

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meditate (v.)

1580s, "to ponder, think abstractly, engage in mental contemplation" (intransitive), probably a back-formation from meditation, or else from Latin meditatus, past participle of meditari "to meditate, think over, reflect, consider," frequentative form of PIE root *med- "take appropriate measures." From 1590s as "to plan in the mind," also "to employ the mind in thought or contemplation," especially in a religious way. Related: Meditated; meditating.