Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Apology comes to English from the Greek roots of apo - (“away from, off”) and logia (from logos, meaning “speech”). The word's earliest meaning in English was “something said or written in defense or justification of what appears to others to be wrong or of what may be liable to disapprobation.”.

  2. Apr 16, 2009 · "The word sorry itself goes back to Anglo-Saxon times, but it originally meant distressed, sad, full of sorrow, full of grief," says David Crystal, author of the Cambridge Encyclopedia of...

  3. A recent survey of more than 1,000 Brits found that that the average person says ‘sorry’ around eight times per day – and that one in eight people apologise up to 20 times a day.

  4. The earliest known use of the noun apology is in the mid 1500s. OED's earliest evidence for apology is from 1533, in the writing of More.

  5. The meaning drifted over time. By the late 16th century the meaning of "speaking in justification" had drifted to "speaking in regret", and by the 18th century this was the primary meaning. Source. This is actually rather common in languages--see here.

  6. The Anglo-Saxon, English speaking world shares the common legacy that their days of the week echo the cries of the pagan warrior tribes who invaded Britain in the Dark Ages… Ben Johnson. 6 min read.

  7. People also ask

  8. OED's earliest evidence for apology is from 1633, in the writing of Thomas Heywood, playwright and poet. It is also recorded as a noun from the mid 1500s. apology is formed within English, by conversion.

  1. People also search for