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  2. Feb 25, 2024 · mid-15c., testificacion, "testimony; act of giving testimony or evidence," from Old French testificacion and directly from Latin testificationem (nominative testificatio), noun of action from past-participle stem of testificari "bear witness, show, demonstrate" (see testify).

    • 한국어 (Korean)

      testify 뜻: 증언하다; 14세기 후반, "법적 증언을 하다, 진실을 확언하다, 증인으로 나서다";...

    • Français (French)

      Signification de testify: témoigner; Fin du 14ème siècle,...

    • Testicle

      Testicle - testify | Etymology of testify by etymonline

    • Testosterone

      Testosterone - testify | Etymology of testify by etymonline

    • Testes

      Testes - testify | Etymology of testify by etymonline

    • Testator

      c. 1300 as two words, from 16c. as one word, "indeterminate...

  3. www.wordorigins.org › big-list-entries › testifytestify — Wordorigins.org

    May 7, 2022 · Testify is a word with a straightforward etymology but one with a myth attached. The verb is a late fourteenth-century borrowing from the medieval Latin testificare, a later variant on the classical testificor.

  4. Testis actually derives from the Indo-European word for ‘three’. This is because Romans considered witnesses only third parties – people who didn’t have a side on a specific dispute and could therefore, tell the story as it really was.

  5. 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...

  6. The earliest known use of the verb testify is in the Middle English period (1150—1500). OED's earliest evidence for testify is from 1377, in the writing of William Langland, poet. testify is a borrowing from Latin. Etymons: Latin testificāre. See etymology.

  7. The practice of swearing an oath while touching one’s or someone else’s testicles was common in the ancient Near East (Abraham also orders a servant to do just that in Genesis 24:2). Its linguistic memory survives in our word “testify”–testis being the Latin both for “witness” and the male generative gland. source

  8. Oct 26, 2024 · testify (third-person singular simple present testifies, present participle testifying, simple past and past participle testified) (transitive, intransitive) To make a declaration, or give evidence, under oath.

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