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Origin and history of viniculture

viniculture(n.)

"cultivation of (grape) vines," 1871, from combining form of Latin vinea "vine" (see vine). For second element, see culture (n.).

Entries linking to viniculture

mid-15c., "the tilling of land, act of preparing the earth for crops," from Latin cultura "a cultivating, agriculture," figuratively "care, culture, an honoring," from past-participle stem of colere "to tend, guard; to till, cultivate" (see colony).

The meaning "the cultivation or rearing of a crop, act of promoting growth in plants" (1620s) was transferred to fish, oysters, etc., by 1796, then to "production of bacteria or other microorganisms in a suitable environment" (1880), then to the product of such a culture (1884).

The figurative sense of "cultivation through education, systematic improvement and refinement of the mind" is attested by c. 1500; Century Dictionary writes that it was, "Not common before the nineteenth century, except with strong consciousness of the metaphor involved, though used in Latin by Cicero."

The meaning "learning and taste, the intellectual side of civilization" is by 1805; the closely related sense of "collective customs and achievements of a people, a particular form of collective intellectual development" is by 1867.

For without culture or holiness, which are always the gift of a very few, a man may renounce wealth or any other external thing, but he cannot renounce hatred, envy, jealousy, revenge. Culture is the sanctity of the intellect. [William Butler Yeats, journal, 7 March, 1909]

Slang culture vulture "one voracious for culture" is from 1947. Culture shock "disorientation experienced when a person moves to a different cultural environment or an unfamiliar way of life" is attested by 1940. Ironic or contemptuous spelling kulchur is attested from 1940 (Pound), and compare kultur.

c. 1300 (mid-13c. as a surname), "climbing or trailing woody-stemmed plant which bears the grapes from which wine is made," from Old French vigne, vin "vine, vineyard" (12c.), from Latin vinea "vine, vineyard," from vinum "wine." This is reconstructed to be from *win-o- "wine," an Italic noun related to words for "wine" in Greek, Armenian, Hittite, and non-Indo-European Georgian and West Semitic (Hebrew yayin, Ethiopian wayn); probably ultimately from a lost Mediterranean language word *w(o)in- "wine."

It is attested from late 14c. in reference to any plant with a long slender stem that trails or winds around. Applied to Christ in echoes of John xv 1, 5.

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