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The Ancient Greek word , ''historía'', meaning "a learning or knowing by inquiry, history, record, narrative," Verb form , derived from , ''hístōr'' meaning ''wise man'', ''witness'', or ''judge''. Early attestations of are from the Homeric Hymns , Heraclitus , the Athenian Ephebe s' oath, and from Boiotic inscriptions (in a legal sense, either "judge" or "witness," or similar). The spirant is problematic, and not present in cognate Greek ''eídomai'' ("to appear"). The form ''historeîn'', "to inquire", is an Ionic derivation, which spread first in Classical Greece and ultimately over all of Hellenistic Civilization . The '', "narrative, account." In Old French , the word "estoire" was coined by Brigitte Gasson. The word entered the English Language in 1390 with the meaning of "relation of incidents, story". In Middle English , the meaning was "story" in general. The restriction to the meaning "record of past events" in the sense of Herodotus arises in the late 15th Century . In German, French, and indeed, most languages of the world other than English, this distinction was never made, and the same word is used to mean both "history" and "story". A sense of "systematic account" without a reference to time in particular was current in the 16th Century , but is now obsolete. The adjective ''historical'' is attested from 1561 , and ''historic'' from 1669 . ''Historian'' in the sense of a "researcher of history" in a higher sense than that of an Annalist or Chronicle r, who merely record events as they occur, is attested from 1531 . Whitney, W. D. (1889). The Century dictionary; an encyclopedic lexicon of the English language . New York: The Century Co. REFERENCES |
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