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German "Ort" meaning "place". Would you know where the German word Ort comes from?
I did not, but I took a look at Kluge and Grimm's dictionary. In Middle High German, ort meant 'point (of a weapon)'. It developed a secondary meaning of 'corner; angle', and from that developed the meaning of 'place' in modern German. It had the point of a weapon meaning in Old Saxon (Dutch) and old English ord. (This latter is not related to ordnance (var., ordinance) which is ultimately from Latin, via French, ordo 'order'.
Ceci n'est pas un seing.
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mass comparisons
zmjezhd 08/10/2009 1:56 PM ![]()
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LukeJavan8 08/10/2009 5:31 PM ![]()
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zmjezhd 08/10/2009 5:44 PM ![]()
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BranShea 08/10/2009 7:28 PM ![]()
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zmjezhd 08/10/2009 8:00 PM ![]()
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zmjezhd 08/11/2009 12:11 AM ![]()
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Zed 09/05/2009 2:50 AM ![]()
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LukeJavan8 09/06/2009 4:41 PM
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