Cultivate

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mid 17th century: from medieval Latin cultivat- ‘prepared for crops’, from the verb cultivare, from cultiva (terra) ‘arable (land)’, from colere ‘cultivate, inhabit’.


wiktionary

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From Medieval Latin cultivātus, perfect passive participle of cultivō(“till, cultivate”), from cultīvus(“tilled”), from Latin cultus, perfect passive participle of colō(“till, cultivate”), which comes from earlier *quelō, from Proto-Indo-European *kʷel-(“to move; to turn (around)”). Cognates include Ancient Greek πέλω(pélō) and Sanskrit चरति(cárati). The same Proto-Indo-European root also gave Latin in-quil-īnus(“inhabitant”) and anculus(“servant”).


etymonline

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cultivate (v.)

by 1650s, of land, "till, prepare for crops;" by 1690s of crops, "raise or produce by tillage;" from Medieval Latin cultivatus, past participle of cultivare "to cultivate," from Late Latin cultivus "tilled," from Latin cultus "care, labor; cultivation," from past participle of colere "to cultivate, to till; to inhabit; to frequent, practice, respect; tend, guard," from PIE root *kwel- (1) "revolve, move round; sojourn, dwell."

Figurative sense of "improve by labor or study, devote one's attention to" is from 1680s. Meaning "court the acquaintance of (someone)" is by 1707. Related: Cultivated; cultivating.