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Origin and history of hardy

hardy(adj.)

c. 1200, "bold, daring, fearless," also "presumptuous, audacious," from Old French hardi "bold, brave, courageous; confident, presumptuous," from past participle of hardir "to harden, be or make bold," from Frankish *hardjan "to make hard" (source also of Old Frisian herda, Old High German herten, Old Norse herða, Gothic gahardjan "make hard"), from Proto-Germanic *hardu- (from PIE root *kar- "hard"). Sense influenced by English hard. Of plants, "able to survive in the open year-round," 1660s. Related: Hardily; hardiness. Hardhede "physical hardiness" is attested from early 15c.

Entries linking to hardy

also fool-hardy, "bold without judgment or moderation," mid-13c., folhardi, from fol "fool" (see fool (n.1) + hardi "bold" (see hardy) hence "foolishly brave." Compare Old French fol hardi. Related: foolhardiness (mid-13c.).

Middle English had also as a noun foolhardiment (mid-15c.) and similar now-obsolete constructions fool-large (c. 1300) "foolishly generous, improvident, prodigal;" fool-hasty "rash, impetuous."

"quality or condition of being hardy," 1630s, from hardy + -hood.

also *ker-, Proto-Indo-European root meaning "hard."

It might form all or part of: -ard; Bernard; cancer; canker; carcinogen; carcinoma; careen; chancre; -cracy; Gerard; hard; hardly; hardy; Leonard; Richard; standard.

It might also be the source of: Sanskrit karkatah "crab," karkarah "hard;" Greek kratos "strength," kratys "strong;" "hard;" Old English heard, German hart "solid and firm, not soft."

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