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      • The Proto-Indo-European root is *trei, with a base meaning of three, and testify and related words come from the compound root *tri-st-i, meaning something like third person standing by, in other words a witness to the fact or truth.
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  2. Feb 25, 2024 · testis. (n.) "a testicle," 1704, from Latin testis (plural testes) "testicle," a word usually regarded as a special application of testis "witness" (see testament) on the notion of what "bears witness to male virility" [Barnhart].

    • Testes

      "a testicle," 1704, from Latin testis (plural testes)...

    • Testosterone

      "a testicle," 1704, from Latin testis (plural testes)...

    • Testify

      Testament had been used in the sense of "covenant between...

    • Testimonial

      testimonial (n.). early 15c., "statement, declaration," also...

  3. Feb 24, 2024 · test. (n.) late 14c., teste, "small vessel used in assaying precious metals," from Old French test, from Latin testum "earthen pot" (in Medieval Latin especially "earthen vessel in which metals are tried"); which is related to testa "shell of shellfish," testudo "tortoise."

  4. Dec 11, 2011 · In ancient Rome, two men taking an oath of allegiance held each other's testicles, and men held their own testicles as a sign of truthfulness while bearing witness in a public forum. The Romans...

  5. Feb 25, 2024 · Testament had been used in the sense of "covenant between God and mankind" in English from early 14c. (as in the account of the Last Supper; see testimony), but the word subsequently was interpreted as Christ's "last will." testification (n.)

  6. It comes from the Latin word "testis", which meant both "witness" and "testicle". It is safe to assume that the word "testify" derives from the former meaning.

  7. www.wordorigins.org › big-list-entries › testifytestify - Wordorigins.org

    May 7, 2022 · The Proto-Indo-European root is *trei, with a base meaning of three, and testify and related words come from the compound root *tri-st-i, meaning something like third person standing by, in other words a witness to the fact or truth. One of its earliest English-language appearances is in William Langland’s poem Piers Plowman, written c.1387 ...

  8. The Latin testis originally meant "witness," and etymologically means "third (person) standing by": the te- part comes from an older tri-, a combining form of the word for "three," and -stis is a noun derived from the Indo-European root st ā - meaning "stand."

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