Differ

来自Big Physics

google

ref

late Middle English (also in the sense ‘put off, defer’): from Old French differer ‘differ, defer’, from Latin differre, from dis- ‘from, away’ + ferre ‘bring, carry’. Compare with defer1.


Ety img differ.png

wiktionary

ref

From Middle English differren, from Old French differer, from Latin differō(“carry apart, put off, defer; differ”), from dis-(“apart”) + ferō(“carry, bear”). Compare Ancient Greek διαφέρω(diaphérō). Doublet of defer (etymology 1).


etymonline

ref

differ (v.)

late 14c., "be unlike, dissimilar, distinct, or various," from Old French differer (14c.) and directly from Latin differre "to set apart, differ," from assimilated form of dis- "apart, away from" (see dis-) + ferre "to bear, carry," from PIE root *bher- (1) "to carry." Meaning "disagree, be of contrary opinion" is from 1560s.

Two senses that were present in Latin have gone separate ways in English in sense and spelling (probably based on different stress) since c. 1500, with defer (transitive) taking one set of meanings and differ (intransitive) the rest. Related: Differed; differing.