starve (v.)
Middle English sterven, "perish, die, cease to exist," also "die spiritually," from Old English steorfan "to die" (past tense stearf, past participle storfen), etymologically "become stiff," from Proto-Germanic *sterbanan "be stiff, starve" (source also of Old Frisian sterva, Old Saxon sterban, Dutch sterven, Old High German sterban "to die"). This is reconstructed to be from an extended form of PIE root *ster- (1) "stiff."
The conjugation became weak in English by 16c. The word seems to have been used especially of lingering or wasting deaths, and came to especially mean "die of cold" (14c.); "die from want of nourishment, suffer from hunger" (mid-15c.). The transitive meaning "afflict or kill with hunger" is recorded by 1520s (Middle English starve of hunger in the same sense is from early 12c.; hunger-storven "dead from hunger" is from late 14c.).
The "die of cold" sense is marked "Now chiefly Eng." in Century Dictionary (1902) and "Now only North." in OED (1989). Wedgwood (1878) notes that "In the Midland Counties to clem is to perish from hunger ; to starve, to suffer from cold."
"Dear me," continued the anxious mother, "what a sad fire we have got, and I dare say you are both starved with cold. Draw your chair nearer, my dear. ..." ["Mansfield Park," 1814]
German cognate sterben "to die" retains the original sense of the word, but the English has come so far from its origins that starve to death (1910) is now common. The verb is not found in Scandinavian, but compare Old Norse stjarfi "tetanus."
Trends of starve
updated on July 07, 2023
Dictionary entries near starve
start
starter
startle
start-up
starvation
starve
starveling
stash
stasis
stat
-stat