Hone

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Middle English: from Old English hān ‘stone’, of Germanic origin; related to Old Norse hein .


文件:Ety img hone.png

wiktionary

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From Middle English hon(“whetstone”), from Old English hān, from Proto-Germanic *hainō (compare Dutch heen, Norwegian hein), from Proto-Indo-European *ḱeh₃i-(“to sharpen”) (compare Ancient Greek κῶνος(kônos, “cone”), Persian سان‎ (sân, “whetstone”)).

Cognate with Icelandic hnúður.

French hogner(“to grumble”).

hone


etymonline

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hone (n.)

Old English han "a stone, rock, (boundary) stone," from Proto-Germanic *haino (source also of Old Norse hein "hone"), from PIE *ko- "to sharpen, whet." The specific sense "whetstone, stone used for sharpening tools that require a delicate edge" emerged in Middle English (early 14c.). "A hone differs from a whetstone in being of finer grit and more compact texture" [Century Dictionary].




hone (v.)

"rub or sharpen on or as on a hone," 1788, from hone (n.). Related: Honed; honing. The verb form in Middle English (hene) and Old English (hænan) meant "cast stones at."