• Sunday, November 12, 2017

    Derivation 

    The word 'material' is from Latin, from the modifier textilis, signifying 'woven', from textus, the past participle of the verb texere, 'to weave'.[5]

    The word 'texture' additionally gets from Latin, most as of late from the Middle French fabrique, or 'building, thing made', and prior as the Latin fabrica 'workshop; a craftsmanship, exchange; a skilful generation, structure, texture', which is from the Latin faber, or 'craftsman who works in hard materials', from PIE dhabh-, signifying 'to fit together'.[6]

    The word 'fabric' gets from the Old English claĆ°, which means a fabric, woven or felted material to wrap around one, from Proto-Germanic kalithaz (look at O.Frisian 'klath', Middle Dutch 'cleet', Dutch 'kleed', Middle High German 'kleit', and German 'kleid', all signifying "garment").[7]

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