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Vlivef Posted 6 years ago
Vocabulary

Antiquarian vs antiquary

Hi,

(1) Looks like these two nouns mean exactly the same?

(2) ... yet the former is MUCH MORE common in modern English?

Looking forward to your comments

  

Top answer

) "one who studies or is fond of antiquities, one versed in knowledge of ancient things," c. )). " As an adjective, "pertaining to antiquaries," from 1771.

  • ) "one who studies or is fond of antiquities, one versed in knowledge of ancient things," c.
  • )).
  • " As an adjective, "pertaining to antiquaries," from 1771.
  • When Latin words were borrowed into English,, they were anglicized or made into noun and adjective forms.
  • Often this involved adding a suffix.
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1 Answers
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antiquary (n.)

1580s, "one versed in knowledge of ancient things," from Latin antiquarius pertaining to antiquity," in Medieval Latin "a copier of old books," from antiquus "ancient, aged, venerable"

antiquarian (n.)

"one who studies or is fond of antiquities, one versed in knowledge of ancient things," c. 1600, with -an + Latin antiquarius "pertaining to anti

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