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Origin Very Common

Origin has 7 different meanings across 1 category:

Noun

Definitions
Noun
1

the place where something begins, where it springs into being

"the Italian beginning of the Renaissance"

"Jupiter was the origin of the radiation"

"Pittsburgh is the source of the Ohio River"

"communism's Russian root"

2

properties attributable to your ancestry

"he comes from good origins"

3

an event that is a beginning; a first part or stage of subsequent events

"The signing of the treaty marked the origin of a new era of peace between the two nations."

4

the point of intersection of coordinate axes; where the values of the coordinates are all zero

"When plotting the function, I placed my ruler at the origin to ensure both the x and y axes started from zero."

5

the source of something's existence or from which it derives or is derived

"the rumor had its origin in idle gossip"

"vegetable origins"

"mineral origin"

"origin in sensation"

6

the descendants of one individual

"his entire lineage has been warriors"

7

The beginning of something.

"The artist traced every curve back to its origin, a single drop of ink that started it all."

In plain English: Origin is the place where something started or came from.

"The origin of the river is located in the snowy mountains."

Usage: Use origin to identify the place or source where something began or came from. It refers specifically to the starting point rather than the current location or cause.

Example Sentences
"The origin of the river is located in the snowy mountains." noun
"The origin of this dish is unknown to most historians." noun
"She tried to find the origin of her family name in old records." noun
"Everyone wants to know the origin of that strange noise outside." noun
Related Terms
originally from seed source orient bionematicide biofumigant fons et origo ideogeny cosmism derivation pseudometeorite recurrent archology pyroclastic motherland biorhythm osascomp sociogenesis affinity
Broader Terms (hypernyms)
point ancestry beginning intersection source genealogy
Narrower Terms (hyponyms)
derivation spring fountainhead headwater wellhead jumping-off place birthplace home point source trail head full blood germination cause preliminary emanation family side

Origin

The word "origin" comes from the Middle English origine, which was borrowed from Old French and originally derived from the Latin orīgō. This Latin root meant "beginning, source, or birth," reflecting its connection to the verb orior ("to rise").

Rhyming Words
gin ogin agin yogin login begin fagin nagin rugin elgin algin oggin dodgin imagin hangin cadgin fungin pidgin naggin beggin
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