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Origin and history of statistic

statistic(n.)

1852, "a statistical statement; one numerical statistic," see statistics. From 1939 in reference to a person considered as nothing more than an example of some measured quantity.

Entries linking to statistic

1770, "science dealing with data about the condition of a state or community" [Barnhart], from German Statistik, popularized and perhaps coined by German political scientist Gottfried Achenwall (1719-1772) in his "Vorbereitung zur Staatswissenschaft" (1748), from Modern Latin statisticum (collegium) "(lecture course on) state affairs," from Italian statista "one skilled in statecraft," from Latin status "a station, position, place; order, arrangement, condition," figuratively "public order, community organization," noun of action from past-participle stem of stare "to stand" (from PIE root *sta- "to stand, make or be firm").

OED points out that "the context shows that [Achenwall] did not regard the term as novel," but current use of it seems to trace to him. Sir John Sinclair is credited with introducing it in English use.

The broader meaning "numerical data of any sort collected and classified systematically" is from 1829; hence the study of any subject by means of extensive enumeration. Abbreviated form stats is recorded by 1961.

"instrument that keeps something stationary," before 1970, from -stat, terminal element in names of scientific instruments.

As an abbreviation of statistic, by 1961. Related: Stats.

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