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Origin and history of surcharge

surcharge(v.)

early 15c., surchargen, "overcharge, charge too much expense," from Old French surcharger "to overload, overburden; overcharge" (12c.), from sur- "over" (see sur- (1)) + chargier "to load" (see charge (v.)).

In the physical sense of "overload, overburden" by 1580s. The meaning "make an extra charge on" is from 1885. The noun is also attested early 15c., "a charge or load above another, excessive load or burden." Related: Surcharged; surcharging.

Entries linking to surcharge

early 13c., chargen, "to load, put a burden on or in; fill with something to be retained," from Old French chargier "to load, burden, weigh down," from Late Latin carricare "to load a wagon or cart," from Latin carrus "two-wheeled wagon" (see car).

The senses of "entrust," "command," and "accuse" all emerged in Middle English and were found in Old French. The sense of "rush in to attack, bear down upon" is from 1560s, perhaps through the earlier meaning "load a weapon" (1540s). The meaning "impose a burden of expense" is from mid-14c. That of "to fix or ask as a price" is from 1787; the meaning "hold liable for payment, enter a debt against" is by 1889. The meaning "fill with electricity" is from 1748. Related: Charged; charging.

word-forming element meaning "over, above, beyond, in addition," especially in words from Anglo-French and Old French, from Old French sour-, sor-, sur-, a form of super-, from Latin super "above, over" (from PIE root *uper "over").

It is in surname, surcharge, surpass, survive, but little used as a word-forming element in English outside scientific and technical terms.

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