Cerebral

来自Big Physics

google

ref

early 19th century: from Latin cerebrum ‘brain’ + -al.


Ety img cerebral.png

wiktionary

ref

Borrowing from French cérébral, from Latin cerebrum(“a brain”); equivalent to cerebrum +‎ -al.

Calque of Sanskrit मूर्धन्य(mūrdhanya, “pertaining to the head”). 


etymonline

ref

cerebral (adj.)

1801, "pertaining to the brain," from French cérébral (16c.), from Latin cerebrum "the brain" (also "the understanding"), from PIE *keres-, from root *ker- (1) "horn; head."


Meaning "intellectual, clever" is from 1929. Cerebral palsy attested from 1824, originally a general term for cases of paralysis that seemed to be traceable to "a morbid state of the encephalon." Used from c. 1860 in a more specific sense based on the work of English surgeon Dr. William Little.