Advertisement
recent (adj.)
early 15c., "recently made," of foods, etc., "fresh, newly made," from Latin recentem (nominative recens) "lately done or made, of recent origin, new, fresh, young," from re- (see re-) + PIE root *ken- "fresh, new, young" (source also of Greek kainos "new;" Sanskrit kanina- "young;" Old Irish cetu- "first," Breton kent "earlier;" Old Church Slavonic načino "to begin," koni "beginning").
Meaning "of or pertaining to the time just before the present" is by 1620s. Related: Recently; recentness ("state or quality of being recent," 1670s, but OED reports recency (1610s) was "Common in 19th c.").
also from early 15c.
Advertisement
Trends of recent
updated on May 19, 2021
Advertisement
Remove ads >
AdvertisementTrending words
Dictionary entries near recent
received
receiver
receivership
recency
recension
recent
receptacle
reception
receptionist
receptive
receptor