Assemble

来自Big Physics

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Middle English: from Old French asembler, based on Latin ad- ‘to’ + simul ‘together’.


文件:Ety img assemble.png

wiktionary

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From Middle English assemblen, from Old French assembler(“to assemble”), from Medieval Latin assimulāre(“to bring together”). Doublet of assimilate.


etymonline

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assemble (v.)

early 14c., transitive ("collect into one place") and intransitive ("meet or come together"), from Old French assembler "come together, join, unite; gather" (11c.), from Latin assimulare "to make like, liken, compare; copy, imitate; feign, pretend," later "to gather together," from assimilated form of ad "to" (see ad-) + simulare "to make like," from stem of similis "like, resembling, of the same kind" (see similar). In Middle English and in Old French it also was a euphemism for "to couple sexually." Meaning "to put parts together" in manufacturing is from 1852. Related: Assembled; assembling. Assemble together is redundant.