Hatchet

Hatchet

Grammar

This term is a noun.

Etimology of Hatchet

(You may find hatchet at the world legal encyclopedia and the etimology of more terms).

c. 1300 (mid-12c. in surnames), “small axe with a short handle,” designed to be used by one hand, from Old French hachete “small combat-axe, hatchet,” diminutive of hache “axe, battle-axe, pickaxe,” possibly from Frankish *happja or some other Germanic source, from Proto-Germanic *hapjo- (source also of Old High German happa “sickle, scythe”), from PIE root *kop- “to beat, strike” (source also of Greek kopis “knife,” koptein “to strike,” komma “piece cut off;” Lithuanian kaplys “hatchet,” kapoti “cut small;” Old Church Slavonic skopiti “castrate,” Russian kopat’ “to hack”). Hatchet-face in reference to one with sharp and prominent features is from 1650s. In Middle English, hatch itself was used in a sense “battle-axe.” In 14c., hang up (one’s) hatchet meant “stop what one is doing.” Phrase bury the hatchet (1794) is from a supposed Native American peacemaking custom. Hatchet-man was originally California slang for “hired Chinese assassin” (1880), later extended figuratively to journalists who attacked the reputation of a public figure (1944).


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