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Origin and history of weevil

weevil(n.)

Middle English wevel, from Old English wifel "small beetle," from Proto-Germanic *webilaz (source also of Old Saxon wibil, Old High German wibil, German Wiebel "beetle, chafer," Old Norse tordyfill "dung beetle"), cognate with Lithuanian vabalas "beetle," from PIE root *(h)uebh- "to weave," also "to move quickly" (see weave (v.)).

The sense gradually narrowed by 15c. to the long-snouted varieties of beetle that, in larval or adult stages, bore into plants, often destroying them. Related: Wevilly.

Entries linking to weevil

Middle English weven, from Old English wefan "practice the craft of weaving; form by interlacing yarn," figuratively "devise, contrive, arrange" (class V strong verb; past tense wæf, past participle wefen), from Proto-Germanic *weban (source also of Old Norse vefa, Middle Low German, Middle Dutch, Dutch weven, Old High German weban, German weben "to weave").

This is reconstructed to be from PIE root *(h)uebh- "to weave;" also "to move quickly" (source also of Sanskrit ubhnati "he laces together," Persian baftan "to weave," Greek hyphē, hyphos "web," Old English webb "web").

The form of the past tense altered in Middle English from wave to wove. The extended sense of "combine into a whole" is from late 14c.; the meaning "go by twisting and turning" is from 1640s. To weave together "make (two things) one by weaving" is from late 14c. Related: Wove; woven; weaving.

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