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event (n.)
1570s, "the consequence of anything" (as in in the event that); 1580s, "that which happens;" from French event, from Latin eventus "occurrence, accident, event, fortune, fate, lot, issue," from past participle stem of evenire "to come out, happen, result," from assimilated form of ex- "out" (see ex-) + venire "to come" (from a suffixed form of PIE root *gwa- "to go, come"). Meaning "a contest or single proceeding in a public sport" is from 1865. Events as "the course of events" is attested from 1842. Event horizon in astrophysics is from 1969.
also from 1570s
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Trends of event
updated on December 09, 2020
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Dictionary entries near event
even-handed
evening
evenly
evenness
evensong
event
eventful
eventide
eventual
eventuality
eventually