Greek Dildo

Greek Dildo




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Greek Dildo
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https://www.etymonline.com/word/dildo
Etymology of dildo by etymonline
Harper, D. (n.d.). Etymology of dildo. Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved July 1, 2022, from https://www.etymonline.com/word/dildo
Harper Douglas, “Etymology of dildo,” Online Etymology Dictionary, accessed July 1, 2022, https://www.etymonline.com/word/dildo.
Harper, Douglas. “Etymology of dildo.” Online Etymology Dictionary, https://www.etymonline.com/word/dildo. Accessed 1 July, 2022.
D. Harper. “Etymology of dildo.” Online Etymology Dictionary. https://www.etymonline.com/word/dildo (accessed July 1, 2022).
a vibrating device that substitutes for an erect penis to provide vaginal stimulation ;
"artificial penis used for female gratification," 1590s, a word of unknown origin. Traditional guesses include a corruption of Italian deletto "delight" (from Latin dilectio , noun of action from diligere "to esteem highly, to love;" see diligence ) or a corruption of English diddle . None of these seems very convincing (Florio's dictionary glosses many words with dildo , but diletto is not one of them.) Century Dictionary perhaps gets closer to the mark:
The earliest use of the word in this sense, and probably the start of its popularity, seems to be via Nashe:
Other early forms include dildoides (1675), dildidoes (1607). Middle English had dillidoun (n.) "a darling, a pet" (mid-15c.), from Old Norse dilla "to lull" (hence dillindo "lullaby"). That sense probably survived into Elizabethan times, if it is the word in Jonson's "Cynthia's Revels":
And dildin seems to be a term for "sweetheart" in a 1675 play:
The thing itself is older. A classical Latin word for one was fascinum (see fascinate ). In later English sometimes a French word, godemiché , was used (1879). Also used in 18c. of things that resemble dildoes, e.g. dildo pear (1756), dildo cactus (1792). 
Shakespeare plays on the double sense, sexual toy and ballad refrain, in "A Winter's Tale."
mid-14c., "constant and earnest effort to accomplish what is undertaken," from Old French diligence "attention, care; haste, speed" and directly from Latin diligentia "attentiveness, carefulness," from diligentem (nominative diligens ) "attentive, assiduous, careful," present-participle adjective from diligere "single out, value highly, esteem, prize, love; aspire to, be content with, appreciate," originally "to pick out, select," from dis- "apart" (see dis- ) + legere "choose, gather," from PIE root *leg- (1) "to collect, gather," with derivatives meaning "to speak (to 'pick out words')."
Sense evolved through time from "love" through "attentiveness" to "carefulness" to "steady effort." Legal sense "attention and care due from a person in a given situation" is from 1620s. From the secondary French sense comes the old useage of diligence for "public stage coach" (1742; dilly for short), from a French shortening of carrosse de diligence .
a set of more or less unrelated meanings that have gathered around a suggestive sound: From 1806 as "to cheat, swindle" (slang); also dialectal duddle, diddle "to totter" (1630s); "move rapidly up and down or backward and forward" (1786). Meaning "waste time" is recorded from 1825. Meaning "to have sex with" is from 1879; that of "to masturbate" (especially of women) is from 1950s. Related: Diddled ; diddler ; diddling .
1590s, "bewitch, enchant," from French fasciner (14c.), from Latin fascinatus , past participle of fascinare "bewitch, enchant, fascinate," from fascinus "a charm, enchantment, spell, witchcraft," which is of uncertain origin. Earliest used of witches and of serpents, who were said to be able to cast a spell by a look that rendered one unable to move or resist. Sense of "delight, attract and hold the attention of" is first recorded 1815.
Possibly from Greek baskanos "slander, envy, malice," later "witchcraft, sorcerery," with form influenced by Latin fari "speak" (see fame (n.)), but others say the resemblance of the Latin and Greek words is accidental. The Greek word might be from a Thracian equivalent of Greek phaskein "to say;" compare enchant , and German besprechen "to charm," from sprechen "to speak." Watkins suggests the Latin word is perhaps from PIE *bhasko- "band, bundle" via a connecting sense of "amulet in the form of a phallus" (compare Latin fascinum "human penis; artificial phallus; dildo"). Related: Fascinated ; fascinating .

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