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I'll give you 2 points for that one.
I've read that it comes from "styweard", menaing keeper of pigs. Scout wrote stew·ard (st".rd, sty"-) n. 1. One who manages another's property, finances, or other affairs. 2. One who is in charge of the household affairs of a large estate, club, hotel, or resort. 3. A ship's officer who is in charge of provisions and dining arrangements. 4. An attendant on a ship or an airplane. 5. An official who supervises or helps to manage an event. 6. A shop steward. --stew·ard intr. & tr.v. stew·ard·ed, stew·ard·ing, stew·ards. To serve as a steward or as the steward of. [Middle English, from Old English stigweard, stºward : stig, stº, hall + weard, keeper; see wer-3 below.] --stew"ard·ship" n. -------------------- wer-3. Important derivatives a wary, aware, ward, lord, steward, warden, award, reward, wardrobe, guard, panorama, revere1. wer-3. To perceive, watch out for. I. O-grade form *wor-. 1. Suffixed form *wor-o-. a. WARY, from Old English wær, watchful; b. AWARE, from Old English gewær, aware (ge-, collective and intensive prefix; see kom); c. WARE2, from Old English warian, to beware. a, b, and c all from Germanic *waraz. 2. Suffixed form wor-to-. a. (i) WARD; LORD, STEWARD, from Old English weard, a watching, keeper; (ii) WARDER2, from Old English weardian, to ward, guard;b. WARDEN; AWARD, REWARD, WARDROBE, from Old North French warder, to guard; c. GUARD, from Old French guarder, to guard; d. REARWARD2, from Anglo-Norman warde, guard. a, b, c, and d all from Germanic *wardaz, guard, and *ward½n, to guard. 3. WARE1, from Old English waru, goods, protection, guard, from Germanic *war½. 4. Suffixed form *wor-wo-. ARCTURUS, PYLORUS, from Greek ouros, a guard. 5. Probably variant *(s)wor-, *s(w)or-. EPHOR, PANORAMA, from Greek horan, to see. II. Suffixed (stative) form *wer-¶-. REVERE1, from Latin ver¶rº, to respect, feel awe for. [Pokorny 8. øer- 1164.] "Bart Senior" wrote in message . net... Define Steward. 1 pt How did the term originate? 2 pts. [Hint: This one is funny!] |