Confession

来自Big Physics

google

ref

late Middle English: via Old French from Latin confessio(n- ), from confiteri ‘acknowledge’ (see confess).


Ety img confession.png

wiktionary

ref

From Middle English confessioun, from Old French confession, from Latin cōnfessiō, cōnfessiōnem(“confession, acknowledgment, creed or avowal of one's faith”). Doublet of confessio.

Morphologically confess +‎ -ion.


etymonline

ref

confession (n.)

late 14c., confessioun, "action of confessing, acknowledgment of a fault or wrong," originally in religion, "the disclosing of sins or faults to a priest as one of the four parts of the sacrament of penance," from Old French confession (10c.), from Latin confessionem (nominative confessio) "confession, acknowledgement," noun of action from past-participle stem of confiteri "to acknowledge" (see confess).

An Old English word for it was andettung, also scriftspræc. Meaning "that which is confessed" is mid-15c. Meaning "a formula of the articles of a religious faith, a creed to be assented to" is from late 14c. In the common law, "admission or acknowledgment of guilt made in court or before a magistrate," 1570s.