You searched for:
“notes”
Etymology: from Latin nota, "mark, sign; character, letter; thought to be related to notus, past participle of noscere; from Old Latin gnoscere, "to recognize".
The meaning "to set in writing: is from about 1400. First recorded around 1300, in the musical sense; and the meaning "brief writing" is from 1548.
This entry is located in the following unit:
not-, nosc-, nit-
(page 2)
note (verb), notes; noted; noting
This entry is located in the following unit:
not-, nosc-, nit-
(page 2)
(Greek: khorde, "gut string" [of a lyre]; used in an extended sense to mean "sinew, flexible rod-shaped organ, string, cord"; Latin: chorda, "related notes in music, string of a musical instrument, cat-gut" via Old French, corde, "rope, string, twist, cord")