[go: up one dir, main page]

Advertisement

Origin and history of ubiquity

ubiquity(n.)

"omnipresence, capacity of being in an indefinite number of places at the same time," 1570s, originally theological (of God, Christ), from Modern Latin ubiquitas, from Latin ubique "everywhere," from ubi "where" (see ubi). Second element is -que "and," also "any, also, ever," as a suffix giving universal meaning to the word it is attached to, from PIE root *kwe "and, -ever" (source also of Hittite -kku "now, even, and;" Sanskrit -ca, Avestan -ca "and, also, if;" Greek -te "and;" Gothic -uh "and, also," nih "if not").

Related: Ubiquitary "being everywhere or in all places" (1590s); ubiquitarian "one who exists everywhere" (1727).

Entries linking to ubiquity

"place, location, position," 1610s, from Latin ubi "where?, in which place, in what place," relative pronominal adverb of place, ultimately from PIE *kwo-bhi- (source also of Sanskrit kuha, Old Church Slavonic kude "where"), locative case of pronominal root *kwo-.

According to OED (1989) common in English c. 1640-1740. Also in classical phrases used in English, such as ubi sunt, literally "where are" (1914), in reference to lamentations for the mutability of things is from a phrase used in certain Medieval Latin Christian works.

Mais où sont les neiges d'antan? [Villon]

"being, existing, or turning up everywhere," 1800, from ubiquity + -ous. The earlier word was ubiquitary (c. 1600), from Modern Latin ubiquitarius, from ubique (see ubiquity). Related: Ubiquitously; ubiquitousness.

Advertisement

More to explore

Share ubiquity

Advertisement
Trending
Dictionary entries near ubiquity
Advertisement