Saturday, February 3, 2007

Hey Guys!
I am glad that it is finally working...
Okay i dunno if this is right but here is an English word with Latin roots, I think- "seduce"
se-self, ducere-to lead. So does it mean "to lead to self"--- makes sense...
Jeremy Y

1 comment:

E Pluribus Unum said...

I love my google!

See below; just a quick supplement, 'se' without, away, is an abbreviation of 'sine'.

Love it when you guys go to town with your cognates!

EM
seduce
1526, "to persuade a vassal, etc., to desert his allegiance or service," from L. seducere "lead away, lead astray," from se- "aside, away" + ducere "to lead." Replaced M.E. seduisen (1477), from M.Fr. séduire "seduce," from O.Fr. suduire "to corrupt, seduce," from L. subducere "draw away, withdraw, remove," from sub- "from under, further" + ducere "to lead" (see duke). Sexual sense, now the prevailing one, is attested from 1560. Seductive is from 1771; seductress is from 1803.