Take

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late Old English tacan ‘get (especially by force), capture’, from Old Norse taka ‘grasp, lay hold of’, of unknown ultimate origin.


文件:Ety img take.png

wiktionary

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From Middle English taken(“to take, lay hold of, grasp, strike”), from Old English tacan(“to grasp, touch”), of North Germanic origin, from Old Norse taka(“to touch, take”), from Proto-Germanic *tēkaną(“to touch”), from Proto-Indo-European *deh₁g-(“to touch”). Gradually displaced Middle English nimen("to take"; see nim), from Old English niman(“to take”). Cognate with Icelandic and Norwegian Nynorsk taka(“to take”), Norwegian Bokmål ta(“to take”), Swedish ta(“to take”), Danish tage(“to take, seize”), Middle Dutch taken(“to grasp”), Dutch taken(“to take; grasp”), Middle Low German tacken(“to grasp”). Compare tackle.


etymonline

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take (v.)

late Old English tacan "to take, seize," from a Scandinavian source (such as Old Norse taka "take, grasp, lay hold," past tense tok, past participle tekinn; Swedish ta, past participle tagit), from Proto-Germanic *takan- (source also of Middle Low German tacken, Middle Dutch taken, Gothic tekan "to touch"), from Germanic root *tak- "to take," of uncertain origin, perhaps originally meaning "to touch."


As the principal verb for "to take," it gradually replaced Middle English nimen, from Old English niman, from the usual West Germanic verb, *nemanan (source of German nehmen, Dutch nemen; see nimble).


OED calls take "one of the elemental words of the language;" take up alone has 55 varieties of meaning in that dictionary's 2nd print edition. Basic sense is "to lay hold of," which evolved to "accept, receive" (as in take my advice) c. 1200; "absorb" (take a punch) c. 1200; "choose, select" (take the high road) late 13c.; "to make, obtain" (take a shower) late 14c.; "to become affected by" (take sick) c. 1300.


Take five is 1929, from the approximate time it takes to smoke a cigarette. Take it easy is recorded by 1880; take the plunge "act decisively" is from 1876; take the rap "accept (undeserved) punishment" is from 1930. Phrase take it or leave it is recorded from 1897. To take (something) on "begin to do" is from late 12c. To take it out on (someone or something) "vent one's anger on other than what caused it" is by 1840.




take (n.)

1650s, "that which is taken," from take (v.). Sense of "money taken in" by a single performance, etc., is from 1931. Movie-making sense is recorded from 1927. Criminal sense of "money acquired by theft" is from 1888. The verb sense of "to cheat, defraud" is from 1920. On the take "amenable to bribery" is from 1930.