Relax

来自Big Physics

google

ref

late Middle English: from Latin relaxare, from re- (expressing intensive force) + laxus ‘lax, loose’.


Ety img relax.png

wiktionary

ref

From Middle English relaxen, from Old French relaxer, from Latin relaxāre(“relax, loosen, open”), from re-(“back”) + laxāre(“loosen”), from laxus(“loose, free”).


etymonline

ref

relax (v.)

late 14c., relaxen, "to make (something) less compact or dense" (transitive), originally especially in medicine, of muscles, etc., from Old French relaschier "set free; soften; reduce" (14c.) and directly from Latin relaxare "relax, loosen, open, stretch out, widen again; make loose," from re- "back" (see re-) + laxare "loosen," from laxus "loose" (from PIE root *sleg- "be slack, be languid"). A doublet of release.

Meaning "decrease tension" is from early 15c. From 1660s as "to make less severe or rigorous." Intransitive sense of "become loose or languid" is by 1762; that of "become less tense" is recorded from 1935. Of persons, "to become less formal," by 1837. Related: Relaxed; relaxing. As a noun, "relaxation, an act of relaxing," from 17c.