Origin vs Ida - What's the difference?
origin | ida |
The beginning of something.
The source of a river, information, goods, etc.
* {{quote-magazine, date=2013-06-14, author=
, volume=189, issue=1, page=37, magazine=(The Guardian Weekly)
, title= (mathematics) The point at which the axes of a coordinate system intersect.
(anatomy) The proximal end of attachment of a muscle to a bone that will not be moved by the action of that muscle.
(cartography) An arbitrary point on the earth's surface, chosen as the zero for a system of coordinates.
(in the plural) Ancestry.
.
* 1809 , Woman, or, Ida of Athens , p.127:
* 1938 (Graham Greene), Brighton Rock , Compact Books 1993, ISBN 0749317256, page 16:
* 2002 (Joyce Carol Oates), I'l Take You There , Fourth Estate 2003, ISBN 0007146442, page 18:
(greekmyth) Name of two sacred mountains situated in present-day Turkey and Crete, also called Mount Ida.
As a noun origin
is the beginning of something.As a proper noun Ida is
{{given name|female|from=Germanic}}.origin
English
Noun
(en noun)Sam Leith
Where the profound meets the profane, passage=Swearing doesn't just mean what we now understand by "dirty words". It is entwined, in social and linguistic history, with the other sort of swearing: vows and oaths. Consider for a moment the origins of almost any word we have for bad language – "profanity", "curses", "oaths" and "swearing" itself.}}
Synonyms
* (source) source * (mathematics) zero vectorAntonyms
* (source) destination * (anatomy) insertionSee also
* provenanceExternal links
* *ida
English
Etymology 1
Short form of obsolete names beginning with Germanic ?d "work", used for both sexes in medieval England. It was revived in the 19th century, partly mistaken for a Greek name, for the Mount Ida of classical mythology.Proper noun
(en proper noun)- "Ida !!!"
- "It is not a common, but an ancient name in Greece", said the diako,"and was borne by the wife of Lycastus and the mother of the Cretan Minos."
- Osmyn blushed to have been over-heard, and suffered his heart alone to repeat again the sweet and simple name of "Ida ".
- "That's what they called me," she said. "My real name's Ida ." The old and vulgarised Grecian name recovered a little dignity.
- "Ida'" - the name was magical to me. In whispers, in the dark. Beneath bedcovers. Forehead pressed to a windowpane coated with frost. "'''Ida'''". What a strange, beautiful name: I could not say it often enough: it was easy to confuse "' Ida " with "I" - - -