band
- band
- There are two distinct words band in
English, but neither of them goes back as far as
Old English. The one meaning ‘group of people’
[15] comes from Old French bande, but is
probably Germanic in ultimate origin; the
specific sense ‘group of musicians’ developed in
the 17th century. Band ‘strip’ [13] comes from
Germanic *bindan, source of English bind, but
reached English in two quite separate phases. It
first came via Old Norse band, in the sense
‘something that ties or constrains’; this replaced
Old English bend, also from Germanic *bindan
(which now survives only as a heraldic term, as
in bend sinister), but is now itself more or less
obsolete, having been superseded by bond, a
variant form. But then in the 15th century it
arrived again, by a different route: Old French
had bande ‘strip, stripe’, which can be traced
back, perhaps via a Vulgar Latin *binda, to the
same ultimate source, Germanic *bindan.
=> BEND, BIND, BOND, BUNDLE, RIBBON
The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins.
2013.
Synonyms:
Look at other dictionaries:
Band — (von althochdeutsch band, gebildet zu binden) hat männliches oder sächliches grammatisches Geschlecht. Das Band (Mehrzahl Bänder) steht für eine flach gewobene Textilie, siehe Band (Textil) in der Medizin für einen Bindegewebsstrang, der… … Deutsch Wikipedia
band — band; band·er; band·ke·ram·ik; band·less; band·mas·ter; band·stra·tion; con·tra·band·age; con·tra·band·ist; dis·band; dis·band·ment; fahl·band; hus·band·age; hus·band·er; hus·band·land; hus·band·less; hus·band·like; hus·band·man; hus·band·ry;… … English syllables
Band — may refer to a specific group: * Band (music), a company of musicians * School band, a group of student musicians who rehearse and perform instrumental music together * Band (radio), a range of frequencies or wavelengths used in radio… … Wikipedia
Band — (b[a^]nd), n. [OE. band, bond, Icel. band; akin to G., Sw., & D. band, OHG. bant, Goth. bandi, Skr. bandha a binding, bandh to bind, for bhanda, bhandh, also to E. bend, bind. In sense 7, at least, it is fr. F. bande, from OHG. bant. [root]90.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Band I — is the name of a radio frequency range within the very high frequency part of the electromagnetic spectrum.Band I ranges from 47 to 88 MHz, and it is primarily used for radio and television broadcasting.Channel spacings vary from country to… … Wikipedia
band — band1 [band] n. [ME < ON band (akin to OE bend); also (in meaning “thin strip”) < Fr bande, flat strip < OFr bende < ML benda < Goth binda < bindan,BIND] 1. something that binds, ties together, restrains, etc. 2. a) a strip or… … English World dictionary
Bánd — Héraldique Administration … Wikipédia en Français
Band II — is the name of a radio frequency range within the very high frequency part of the electromagnetic spectrum.Band II ranges from 87.5 to 108.0 MHz, and it is primarily used worldwide for frequency modulation radio broadcasting.ee also*Band I *Band… … Wikipedia
Band — ¹Band 1. Gurt, Streifen; (regional): Bändel. 2. a) Kassette, Magnetband, Tonband, Tonbandkassette; (veraltend): Tape. b) Frequenzband, Frequenzbereich, Wellenband, Wellenbereich. 3. Fesseln, Knechtschaft, Unfreiheit, Unterdrückung; (bildungsspr.) … Das Wörterbuch der Synonyme
Band — (et), Band (der) Band (das) Band (et) Band (der) Band (der) … Kölsch Dialekt Lexikon
bånd — sb., et, bånd, ene; rødt bånd; optage på bånd; lægge kufferten på båndet; knytte stærke bånd; lægge bånd på sig selv … Dansk ordbog