dagger

A small and richly decorated Mughal-era dagger of North India (Louvre, Paris, MR 13434)

Meanings

Noun

Verb

  • To pierce with a dagger; to stab.

Related

Similar words

Origin

  • From Middle English daggere, probably adapted from Old French dague (1229), related to Occitan, Italian, Spanish daga, Dutch dagge, German Degen, Middle Low German dagge ("knife's point"), Old Norse daggardr, Welsh dager, dagr, Breton dac, Albanian thikë ("a knife, dagger"), thek.
  • In English attested from the 1380s.
  • The ultimate origin of the word is unclear. Grimm suspects Celtic origin.
  • Others have suggested derivation from an unattested Vulgar Latin *daca "Dacian [knife]", from the Latin adjective dācus. Chastelain (Dictionaire etymologique, 1750) thought that French dague was a derivation from German dagge, dagen, although not attested until a much later date).
  • The knightly dagger evolves from the 12th century. Guillaume le Breton (died 1226) uses daca in his Philippide. Other Middle Latin forms include daga, dagga, dagha, dagger, daggerius, daggerium, dagarium, dagarius, diga; the forms with -r- are late 14th century adoptions of the English word).
  • OED points out that there is also an English verb dag from which this could be a derivation, but the verb is attested only from about 1400.
  • Relation to Old Armenian դակու has also been suggested. Alternatively, a connection from Proto-Indo-European *dʰāg-u- and cognate with Ancient Greek θήγω.
  • Perhaps from diagonal.

Modern English dictionary

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