science dâneš (#) Fr.: science
Etymology (EN): M.E., from O.Fr. science, from L. scientia “knowledge,”
from sciens (genitive scientis), pr.p. of scire
“to know,” probably originally “to separate one thing from another, to distinguish,”
related to scindere “to cut, divide;”
PIE base *skei- “to cut, split;” cf. Pers.
gosastan “to tear, cut, break,” from Mid.Pers. wisistan “to break,
split,” Av. saed-, sid- “to split, break,” asista- “unsplit, unharmed;”
Skt. chid- “to split, break, cut off;”
Gk. skhizein “to split;” Etymology (PE): Dâneš, verbal noun of dân-, dânestan “to know” (Mid.Pers.
dânistan “to know”), variant šenâxtan, šenâs-
“to recognize, to know” (Mid.Pers. šnâxtan, šnâs- “to know, recognize”); |