Morbid

来自Big Physics

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mid 17th century (in the medical sense): from Latin morbidus, from morbus ‘disease’.


Ety img morbid.png

wiktionary

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From Latin morbidus(“diseased”), from morbus(“sickness”), itself from the root of morī(“to die”) or directly from Proto-Indo-European *mer-(“to rub, pound, wear away”).


etymonline

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morbid (adj.)

1650s, "of the nature of a disease, indicative of a disease," from Latin morbidus "diseased," from morbus "sickness, disease, ailment, illness," according to de Vaan perhaps connected to the root of mori "to die," as "looking like death" (from PIE root *mer- "to rub away, harm," also "to die" and forming words referring to death and to beings subject to death), or from a non-IE word. Meaning "diseased, sickly" is from 1731. Transferred use, of mental states, "unwholesome, excessive, unreasonable" is by 1834. Related: Morbidly; morbidness. Middle English had morbous "diseased" (early 15c.), from Latin morbosus.