- root
- {{11}}root (n.) "underground part of a plant," late O.E. rot, from O.N. rot "root," from P.Gmc. *wrot, *vrot (with characteristic loss of -w- before -r-), from PIE *wrd-. The Old English cognate was wyrt "root, herb, plant" (see WORT (Cf. wort)); also cognate with L. radix. The usual Old English words for "root" were wyrttruma and wyrtwala.Figurative use is from c.1200. Of teeth, hair, etc., from early 13c. Mathematical sense is from 1550s. Slang meaning "penis" is recorded from 1846. Root beer first recorded 1841, American English; root doctor is from 1821. Root cap is from 1875.{{12}}root (v.3) "fixed or firmly attached by roots" (often figurative), late 14c., from ROOT (Cf. root) (n.); sense of "to pull up by the root" (now usually UPROOT (Cf. uproot)) also is from late 14c. Related: Rooted; rooting.{{12}}root (v1.) "dig with the snout," 1530s, from M.E. wroten "dig with the snout," from O.E. wrotan, from P.Gmc. *wrotanan (Cf. O.N. rota, Swed. rota "to dig out, root," M.L.G. wroten, M.Du. wroeten, O.H.G. ruozian "to plow up"), cognate with L. rodere "to gnaw" (see RODENT (Cf. rodent)). Associated with the verb sense of ROOT (Cf. root) (n.). Extended sense of "poke about, pry" first recorded 1831. Phrase root hog or die "work or fail" first attested 1834, American English (in works of Davey Crockett, who noted it as an "old saying"). Reduplicated form rootin' tootin' "noisy, rambunctious" is recorded from 1875.{{13}}root (v2.) "cheer, support," 1889, American English, originally in a baseball context, probably from ROOT (Cf. root) (v.1) via intermediate sense of "study, work hard" (1856). Related: Rooted; rooting.
Etymology dictionary. 2014.