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Origin and history of teamwork

teamwork(n.)

also team-work, 1828, "work done by a team of horses, oxen, etc." (as distinguished from manual labor), from team (n.) + work (n.). Attested by 1889 in extended sense of "work done by the combined action of a team of players," originally U.S. colloquial, in baseball.

Entries linking to teamwork

Middle English teme "a family, tribe, native stock" (senses now obsolete), from Old English team "descendant, family, race, line; child-bearing, brood;" also "company, band;" from Proto-Germanic *tau(h)maz (source also of Old Norse taumr, Old Frisian tam "bridle; progeny, line of descent," Dutch toom, Old High German zoum, German Zaum "bridle"), probably literally "that which draws" (Watkins), from PIE *douk-mo-, from root *deuk- "to lead."

It was applied in Old English to groups working together for some purpose, such as "set of draft animals yoked together," in early Middle English especially as a legal term, "group of people acting together to bring suit."

The modern general sense of "persons associated in some joint action" is from 1520s. Especially "one of the parties or sides in a contest or match" (1846, in cricket). Team spirit is recorded by 1879 in U.S. sports jargon; perhaps suggested by esprit de corps. Team player is attested by 1886, originally in baseball. Team sport is by 1964.

The older senses relating to offspring or capacity for childbearing are more evident in teem (v.1).

Middle English werk, from Old English weorc, worc "a deed, something done, action (whether voluntary or required), proceeding, business;" also "that which is made or manufactured, products of labor," also "physical labor, toil; skilled trade, craft, or occupation; opportunity of expending labor in some useful or remunerative way;" also "military fortification." This is reconstructed to be from Proto-Germanic *werka- "work," from a suffixed form of PIE root *werg- "to do."

The meaning "physical effort, exertion" is attested by c. 1200, as are those of "scholarly labor" and "artistic labor" or their productions. The specific meaning "embroidery, stitchery, needlepoint" is from late 13c.

The sense of "labor as a measurable commodity" is from c. 1300.

Work of art attested by 1774 as "artistic creation," earlier (1728) "artifice, production of humans" (as opposed to by nature). Work ethic is by 1955. To be out of work "unemployed" is from 1590s. To make clean work of is from c. 1300; to make short work of is from 1640s.

Proverbial expression many hands make light work is from c. 1300. To have (one's) work cut out for one is from 1610s; to have it prepared and prescribed, hence, to have all one can handle. Work in progress is by 1880 in accounts of construction projects, etc.; also a specific term in accountancy and parliamentary procedure. General figurative sense is by 1930.

Work is less boring than amusing oneself. [Baudelaire, "Mon Coeur mis a nu," 1862]

Germanic cognates include Old Saxon, Old Frisian, Dutch werk, Old Norse verk, Middle Dutch warc, Old High German werah, German Werk, Gothic gawaurki.

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