Tuesday, November 26, 2019
What For- Is For
What For- Is For  What For- Is For  What For- Is For                                      By Mark Nichol                                            	  The element for-, though it stems from the same Proto-Germanic word that gave us the preposition for, deviated from the common ancestor to serve as a prefix meaning ââ¬Å"away,â⬠ ââ¬Å"opposite,â⬠ or ââ¬Å"completely.â⬠ Thatââ¬â¢s the sense that contributes to the meaning of most words beginning with for-.  Notice that these words have in common that their connotations are definitive: The verbs forbid (ââ¬Å"prohibit,â⬠ with a root cognate with bid and meaning ââ¬Å"commandâ⬠), forget (ââ¬Å"fail to rememberâ⬠ or ââ¬Å"inadvertently neglect,â⬠ with a root cognate with get and meaning ââ¬Å"grasp,â⬠), and forgive (ââ¬Å"pardon,â⬠ with a self-evident root) are potent; so, too, is the adverb forever (ââ¬Å"always,â⬠ with a self-evident root).  Other words in the for- family have not only that strong sense but also an archaic ring to them, and most are rare: the verbs forbear (ââ¬Å"refrainâ⬠ or ââ¬Å"endureâ⬠; the root is self-evident), forfend (ââ¬Å"preventâ⬠ or ââ¬Å"protectâ⬠; the root, fend, is the word meaning ââ¬Å"ward offâ⬠), forgo (ââ¬Å"refrain fromâ⬠; the root is self-evident); forlorn (originally ââ¬Å"disgraced,â⬠ later ââ¬Å"wretchedâ⬠ and ââ¬Å"abandonedâ⬠; the root- also seen in lovelorn, meaning ââ¬Å"pining for loveâ⬠- means ââ¬Å"lostâ⬠), forsake (ââ¬Å"abandonâ⬠; the root, cognate with sake, means ââ¬Å"blameâ⬠ or ââ¬Å"disputeâ⬠), and forswear (ââ¬Å"renounceâ⬠; the root is self-evident) and the adverb forsooth (ââ¬Å"indeedâ⬠; the root, cognate with sooth, means ââ¬Å"truthâ⬠).  Other intensive terms, which are so archaic as to be obsolete, are the verb fordo (ââ¬Å"destroyâ⬠ or ââ¬Å"killâ⬠; the adjectival form, fordone, survives in an inverted version as the idiomatic phrase ââ¬Å"done forâ⬠) and the adjective forblak (ââ¬Å"exceedingly blackâ⬠).  Several for- words are only partially related: The first syllable in the adjective foreign (ââ¬Å"from beyond oneââ¬â¢s own countryâ⬠) and in forfeit, both a verb and a noun (ââ¬Å"give upâ⬠ or ââ¬Å"something given up,â⬠ respectively), is from a Latin element meaning ââ¬Å"outside,â⬠ which is distantly akin to the other for-.  The verb and adverb forward (the word retains a noun function only in reference to a position held by certain athletes) was spelled forewearde in Old English. Like words that still begin with fore-, it pertains to something located before something else (or, in the case of some of these words, something occurring before something else); for- and fore- are distant relatives. Fortune and fortuitous are unrelated outliers based on the Latin root that means ââ¬Å"chanceâ⬠ or ââ¬Å"luck.â⬠  The second element in therefor and therefore- the distinction between the first rare form and the more common second one is ââ¬Å"by reason of thatâ⬠ versus ââ¬Å"in consequence of that,â⬠ respectively- is the conjunction for (ââ¬Å"becauseâ⬠).                                          Want to improve your English in five minutes a day? Get a subscription and start receiving our writing tips and exercises daily!                Keep learning! Browse the Vocabulary category, check our popular posts, or choose a related post below:Apply to, Apply for, and Apply withWhat to Do When Words Appear Twice in a Row5 Examples of Insufficient Hyphenation    
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