Cahoots

来自Big Physics

wiktionary

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From earlier cahoot. This word was used in popular English literature in the early nineteenth century. It comes perhaps from French cahute(“hut”), from Middle French quahute, from Old French *cahute, chahute, possibly as a blend of cabane(“cabin”) and/or caverne(“cavern”) + Old French hute(“hut”); or alternatively from Old French ca-(pejorative prefix) + hute(“hut”). Also possibly considered to be from French cohorte, or a slang form of English cohort in the meaning "accomplice."


etymonline

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cahoots (n.)

"company, partnership," 1829, Southern and Western American English, of unknown origin; said [OED] to be perhaps from French cahute "cabin, hut" (12c.), but U.S. sources [Bartlett] credit it to French cohorte (see cohort), which is said to have had a sense of "companions, confederates."