How are you all
I hope this topic finds you at the best of health and joy
today I'm going to Give the history of some commonly used words in our daily life Referring to the Etymology
and I hope you like this topic and get the best asset of it
Good-Bye
Very Important to clarify the Misunderstanding of its meaning
From godbwye (1573), itself a contraction of God be with ye, infl. by good day, good evening, etc.
The word is now shortened to Bye
ETYMOLOGY: Alteration (influenced by good day) of God be with you.
WORD HISTORY: No doubt more than one reader has wondered exactly how goodbye is derived from the phrase “God be with you.” To understand this, it is helpful to see earlier forms of the expression, “ godbwye” ,that is a contraction of ” God be with ye”. The first word of the expression is now good and not God, for good replaced God by analogy with such expressions as good day, perhaps after people no longer had a clear idea of the original sense of the expression.
A letter of 1573 written by Gabriel Harvey (English writer) contains the first recorded use of goodbye: “To requite your gallonde [gallon] of godbwyes, I regive you a pottle of howdyes,” recalling another contraction that is still used.
As we see that this word means in general (God be with you ) so when you are to say it just make the intention that The only God is ALLAHI hope this topic finds you at the best of health and joy
today I'm going to Give the history of some commonly used words in our daily life Referring to the Etymology
and I hope you like this topic and get the best asset of it
Good-Bye
Very Important to clarify the Misunderstanding of its meaning
From godbwye (1573), itself a contraction of God be with ye, infl. by good day, good evening, etc.
The word is now shortened to Bye
ETYMOLOGY: Alteration (influenced by good day) of God be with you.
WORD HISTORY: No doubt more than one reader has wondered exactly how goodbye is derived from the phrase “God be with you.” To understand this, it is helpful to see earlier forms of the expression, “ godbwye” ,that is a contraction of ” God be with ye”. The first word of the expression is now good and not God, for good replaced God by analogy with such expressions as good day, perhaps after people no longer had a clear idea of the original sense of the expression.
A letter of 1573 written by Gabriel Harvey (English writer) contains the first recorded use of goodbye: “To requite your gallonde [gallon] of godbwyes, I regive you a pottle of howdyes,” recalling another contraction that is still used.
and ALLAH knows best
O.K.
It was popularized by use as an election slogan by the O.K. Club, New York boosters of Democratic president Martin Van Buren's 1840 re-election bid, in allusion to his nickname Old Kinderhook, from his birth in the N.Y. village of Kinderhook.
Van Buren lost, the word stuck, in part because it filled a need for a quick way to write an approval on a ********, bill, etc. The noun is first attested 1841; the verb 1888. Spelled out as “okeh” , 1919, by Woodrow Wilson, on assumption that it represented Choctaw “okeh” (a theory which lacks historical ********ation); this was ousted quickly by “okay” after the appearance of that form in 1929. Okey-doke is student slang first attested 1932.
A.M.
abbreviation of ante meridiem "before noon."
Yahoo
"a brute in human form," 1726, from the race of brutish human creatures in Swift's "Gulliver's Travels."
Swift : An English Writer
Saturday
"day of the planet Saturn,"= "Saturn's day
Sunday
"day of the sun,"
Monday
“Day of moon”
While moon came from mona or mani the Germanic moon God
Tuesday
Tues from the word “Tiwes” that is from “Tiwaz ; the Roman god of war “
Wednesday
From “Woden’s day”
Woden is a Germanic god of Anglo-Saxons in England
Thursday
“Thor’s day “
Thor : one of the strongest ancient latin Gods
Friday
“The day of Frige”
Firge is the Anglo-Saxon form of Frigg, the Ancient Germanicgoddess of beauty.
![36 1 39[1]](http://www.shabab3sl.com/vb/images/smilies/36_1_39%5B1%5D.gif)
It was popularized by use as an election slogan by the O.K. Club, New York boosters of Democratic president Martin Van Buren's 1840 re-election bid, in allusion to his nickname Old Kinderhook, from his birth in the N.Y. village of Kinderhook.
Van Buren lost, the word stuck, in part because it filled a need for a quick way to write an approval on a ********, bill, etc. The noun is first attested 1841; the verb 1888. Spelled out as “okeh” , 1919, by Woodrow Wilson, on assumption that it represented Choctaw “okeh” (a theory which lacks historical ********ation); this was ousted quickly by “okay” after the appearance of that form in 1929. Okey-doke is student slang first attested 1932.
A.M.
abbreviation of ante meridiem "before noon."
Yahoo
"a brute in human form," 1726, from the race of brutish human creatures in Swift's "Gulliver's Travels."
Swift : An English Writer
Saturday
"day of the planet Saturn,"= "Saturn's day
Sunday
"day of the sun,"
Monday
“Day of moon”
While moon came from mona or mani the Germanic moon God
Tuesday
Tues from the word “Tiwes” that is from “Tiwaz ; the Roman god of war “
Wednesday
From “Woden’s day”
Woden is a Germanic god of Anglo-Saxons in England
Thursday
“Thor’s day “
Thor : one of the strongest ancient latin Gods
Friday
“The day of Frige”
Firge is the Anglo-Saxon form of Frigg, the Ancient Germanicgoddess of beauty.
![36 1 39[1]](http://www.shabab3sl.com/vb/images/smilies/36_1_39%5B1%5D.gif)

Interesting to know.
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