The American Heritage Dictionary offers a few thoughts about
the meaning of the word “free.” They seem appropriate for the Fourth of July.
What does
it mean to be a land of the “free”? Linguistically, the word free follows a fairly simple path.
Our adjective free comes
from the Old English frēo. Frēo is
closely related to the Old English verb frēon, which meant “to love, like, honor, set free (from slavery
or confinement).” This brings new light to the aphorism, “If you love someone,
set them free.” In fact, the linguistic connection between freeing and loving
lives on in the word friend,
a cognate of our word free.
The dictionary adds that the word
“free” shares a common root with the word “friend.” Perhaps this means that, as opposed
to blood ties, we choose our friends freely and can sustain or dissolve our friendships
freely.
Friend and free share ancestry with the Old
English frēon, the present
participle of which is frēond. Frēond is the source of our word friend.Further links between the
concept of friend and
the concept of love can
be easily spotted between the Latin amīcus,
“friend,” and amō, “I
love,” as What well as between the Greek philos, “friend,” and phileō, “I love.
1 comment:
'Love' and 'free' diverged when guys realized it aint free to take a girl out on a date.
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