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Origin and history of celeb

celeb(n.)

colloquial shortening of celebrity "celebrated person," by 1908, American English.

Entries linking to celeb

late 14c., "solemn rite or ceremony," from Old French celebrité "celebration" or directly from Latin celibritatem (nominative celebritas) "multitude, fame," from celeber "frequented, populous" (see celebrate). The meaning "condition of being famous" is from c. 1600; that of "a famous person" is from 1849.

When the old gods withdraw, the empty thrones cry out for a successor, and with good management, or even without management, almost any perishable bag of bones may be hoisted into the vacant seat. [E.R. Dodds, "The Greeks and the Irrational"]
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    Trends of celeb

    adapted from books.google.com/ngrams/ with a 7-year moving average; ngrams are probably unreliable.

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