Prescription

来自Big Physics

google

ref

late Middle English (as a legal term): via Old French from Latin praescriptio(n- ), from the verb praescribere (see prescribe). prescription (sense 1) dates from the late 16th century.


Ety img prescription.png

wiktionary

ref

Borrowed from Middle French, from Old French prescripcion, from Latin praescriptio.


etymonline

ref

prescription (n.)

late 14c., prescripcioun, in law, "a title or right acquired through long use or uninterrupted possession," from Old French prescription (13c.) and directly from Latin praescriptionem (nominative praescriptio) "a writing before, order, direction," noun of action from past participle stem of praescribere "write before, prefix in writing; ordain, determine in advance," from prae "before" (see pre-) + scribere "to write" (from PIE root *skribh- "to cut").


Meaning "act of establishing by rules" is from 1540s. The medical sense of "written directions from a doctor of the medicines or remedies to be used by a patient and the manner of using them" is recorded by 1570s. The word has been confused with proscription at least since c. 1400.