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zeitgeist (n.)

1848, from German Zeitgeist (Herder, 1769), "spirit of the age," literally "time-spirit," from Zeit "time" (from Proto-Germanic *tidiz "division of time," from PIE root *da- "to divide") + Geist "spirit" (see ghost (n.)). Carlyle has it as a German word in "Sartor Resartus" (1831) and translates it as "Time-Spirit."

also from 1848
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Trends of zeitgeist

updated on April 11, 2024

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