Claim

来自Big Physics

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Middle English: from Old French claime (noun), clamer (verb), from Latin clamare ‘call out’.


Ety img claim.png

wiktionary

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From Middle English claimen, borrowed from Old French clamer(“to call, name, send for”), from Latin clāmō, clāmāre(“to call, cry out”), from Proto-Indo-European *kelh₁-(“to shout”), which is imitative; see also Lithuanian kalba(“language”), Old English hlōwan(“to low, make a noise like a cow”), Old High German halan(“to call”), Ancient Greek καλέω(kaléō, “to call, convoke”), κλέδον(klédon, “report, fame”), κέλαδος(kélados, “noise”), Middle Irish cailech(“cock”), Latin calō(“to call out, announce solemnly”), Sanskrit उषःकल(uṣaḥkala, “cock”, literally “dawn-calling”). Cognate with Spanish llamar and clamar.


etymonline

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claim (v.)

c. 1300, "to call, call out; to ask or demand by virtue of right or authority," from accented stem of Old French clamer "to call, name, describe; claim; complain; declare," from Latin clamare "to cry out, shout, proclaim," from PIE root *kele- (2) "to shout." Related: Claimed; claiming.

Meaning "to maintain as true, assert a belief or opinion" is from 1864 ("A common use, regarded by many as inelegant" - Century Dictionary, 1895); claim properly should not stray too far from its true meaning of "to demand recognition of a right." Specific sense "to make a claim" (on an insurance company) is from 1897.




claim (n.)

early 14c., "a demand of a right; right of claiming," from Old French claime "claim, complaint," from clamer (see claim (v.)). Meaning "thing claimed or demanded" is from 1792; specifically "piece of land allotted and taken" (chiefly U.S. and Australia, in reference to mining); claim-jumper is attested from 1839. Insurance sense "application for guaranteed compensation" is from 1878.