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Origin and history of varietal

varietal(adj.)

1849, "having the characteristics of a variety, of the nature of a subspecies," 1849, a biologists' word, from variety + -al (1). In reference to wines, "made from a single variety of grape," is attested by 1941, American English. As a noun, in this sense, attested from 1955. Related: Varietally.

Entries linking to varietal

1540s, "fact or quality of being varied, diversity, absence of monotony;" 1550s, "collection of different things; discrepancy between different things of the same kind;" from French variété and directly from Latin varietatem (nominative varietas) "difference, diversity; a kind, variety, species, sort," from varius "various" (see vary).

The sense of "something different from others of the same kind, variant" is from 1610s. As an artistic quality, 1590s. In reference to music hall or theatrical performances of a mixed character, it is recorded by 1868 (variety troupe), American English.

variety-show. An entertainment consisting of dances, songs, negro-minstrelsy, gymnastics, or specialties of any kind, sometimes including farces or short sketches written to exhibit the accomplishments of the company. [Century Dictionary, 1891] 

The U.S. theater and entertainment industry magazine was founded in 1905 by Sime Silverman.

Variety's grammar is barbarous; its style is original and unique and completely independent of any other writing; its phraseology is wild and revolutionary and its diction is the result of miscegenation among shop talk, slang, Broadway colloquialisms, sporting neologisms and impatient short-cutting. [Hugh Kent, "Variety," American Mercury, December 1926] 

suffix forming adjectives from nouns or other adjectives, "of, like, related to, pertaining to," Middle English -al, -el, from French or directly from Latin -alis (see -al (2)).

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