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Origin and history of gesundheit

gesundheit(interj.)

1914, from German Gesundheit, literally "health!", from Old High German gisunt, gisunti "healthy" (see sound (adj.)). Also in the German toast auf ihre Gesundheit "to your health." God bless you after someone sneezes is credited to St. Gregory the Great, but the pagan Romans (Absit omen) and Greeks had similar customs.

Entries linking to gesundheit

"healthy, not diseased, free from special defect or injury," c. 1200, sounde, from Old English gesund "sound, safe, having the organs and faculties complete and in perfect action," from Proto-Germanic *sunda-, from Germanic root *swen-to- "healthy, strong" (source also of Old Saxon gisund, Old Frisian sund, Dutch gezond, Old High German gisunt, German gesund "healthy," as in the post-sneezing interjection gesundheit; also Old English swið "strong," Gothic swinþs "strong," German geschwind "fast, quick"). The German words have connections in Indo-Iranian and Balto-Slavic.

Paired alliteratively with safe (adj.) at least from c. 1300. The meaning "right, correct, free from error, in accord with facts" is from mid-15c. The sense of "holding accepted opinions" is from 1520s. Of arguments, etc., "without logical flaw," 1570s. The meaning "financially solid or safe" is attested from c. 1600; of sleep, "undisturbed, unbroken," from 1540s.

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