Demolish

来自Big Physics

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mid 16th century: from French démoliss-, lengthened stem of démolir, from Latin demoliri, from de- (expressing reversal) + moliri ‘construct’ (from moles ‘mass’).


Ety img demolish.png

wiktionary

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Attested since the 16th century; from Middle Frenchdemoliss-, the stem of some conjugated forms of the verb demolir(“to destroy”, “to tear down”), from Latin dēmōlior(“I tear down”).


etymonline

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demolish (v.)

1560s, "to destroy the structural character of (a building, wall, etc.), by violently pulling it to pieces," from French demoliss-, present-participle stem of démolir "to destroy, tear down" (late 14c.), from Latin demoliri "tear down," from de "down" (see de-) + moliri "build, construct," from moles (genitive molis) "massive structure" (see mole (n.3)). Figurative sense of "to destroy, lay waste" is from 1610s; humorously, "to consume," by 1756. Related: Demolished; demolishing.