Information

来自Big Physics

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late Middle English (also in the sense ‘formation of the mind, teaching’), via Old French from Latin informatio(n- ), from the verb informare (see inform).


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wiktionary

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From Middle English informacion, enformacion, borrowed from Anglo-Norman informacioun, enformation, Old French information, from Latin īnfōrmātiō(“formation, conception; education”), from the participle stem of īnformāre(“to inform”). Compare West Frisian ynformaasje(“information”), Dutch informatie(“information”), German Information(“information”), Danish information(“information”), Swedish information(“information”), Norwegian informasjon(“information”). Morphologically inform +‎ -ation


etymonline

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information (n.)

late 14c., informacion, "act of informing, communication of news," from Old French informacion, enformacion "advice, instruction," from Latin informationem (nominative informatio) "outline, concept, idea," noun of action from past participle stem of informare "to train, instruct, educate; shape, give form to" (see inform). The restored Latin spelling is from 16c.

Meaning "knowledge communicated concerning a particular topic" is from mid-15c. The word was used in reference to television broadcast signals from 1937; to punch-card operating systems from 1944; to DNA from 1953. Information theory is from 1950; information technology is from 1958 (coined in "Harvard Business Review"); information revolution, to be brought about by advances in computing, is from 1966. Information overload is by 1967.