Rinse

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Middle English (as a verb): from Old French rincer, of unknown ultimate origin.


Ety img rinse.png

wiktionary

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From Middle English rinsen, rensen, rinshen, rencen(“to rinse”), partly from Old Norse hreinsa(“to rinse”); and partly from Old French rincier, rinser, reinser(“to rinse”), Old Northern French raïncer, raïncier(“to rinse, cleanse”), from Old Norse hreinsa(“to rinse, cleanse”), from Proto-Germanic *hrainisōną(“to clean, purify”), from Proto-Indo-European *krey-(“to separate, divide”). Cognate with Danish rense(“to purify”), Norwegian rense(“to cleanse”), Swedish rensa(“to purge, clear, wipe clean”), Old High German reinisōn(“to clean, purify, atone”), German rein(“pure, clean”), Gothic 𐌷𐍂𐌰𐌹𐌽𐍃( hrains, “clean”). More at riddle.


etymonline

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rinse (v.)

c. 1300, rinsen, rincen, "subject to light washing; wash with water only" (originally in liturgy; from mid-13c. in surname Rinsfet), from Old French reincier (transitive) "to wash, cleanse" (12c., Modern French rincer), probably a dissimilation of recincier, from Vulgar Latin *recentiare "to make fresh, to wash, cleanse with water," from Late Latin recentare "to make fresh," from Latin recens "new, fresh" (see recent). OED says any similarity in form and sense with Old Norse hreinsa is "prob[ably] accidental."


In general use, of bowls, cups, etc., c. 1400; the meaning "wash (laundry) a second time to remove remaining impurities, soap, etc. that may have been left" is by c. 1500. Related: Rinsed; rinsing.




rinse (n.)

"a light washing; a renewed application of water to remove residue from a former washing," 1837, from rinse (v.). As a hair treatment, by 1928. An earlier noun was Middle English rincinge (c. 1300).