This quote explains that in “going concern”, ‘going’ means ‘ongoing’.
No, it's not a "concern" in the sense of "worries".
It's a concern in the sense of "commercial enterprise, entity".
Simila...
1 answer
·
posted 1y ago
by Nen
· last activity
1y ago
by Jirka Hanika
All pages refer to Oxford Latin Dictionary 2012 2nd edition (OLD). Page 48 breaks down adimō as ‘[AD- + EMŌ]”, and defines adimō as follow
1 To remove (something) by physical force (from a perso...
I saw this at https://english.stackexchange.com/q/624915, but it got closed without answer. I would like answers, thx.
Etymonline commences with c. 1300, "counting," especially "reckoning of money...
0 answers
·
posted 1y ago
by Nen
· edited
1y ago
by Nen
"concern" is quite old English for an establishment or business of some kind.“
How did this business meaning of concern develop from the Latin concernō that meant “to mix, sift or mingle toge...