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Origin and history of clay

clay(n.)

Old English clæg "stiff, sticky earth; clay," from Proto-Germanic *klaijaz (source also of Old High German kliwa "bran," German Kleie, Old Frisian klai, Old Saxon klei, Middle Dutch clei, Danish klæg "clay;" also Old English clæman, Old Norse kleima, Old High German kleiman "to cover with clay").

Some sources see these as being from a common PIE root meaning "slime; glue" also forming words for "clay" and verbs for "stick together." Compared words include Latin gluten "glue, beeswax;" Greek gloios "sticky matter;" Lithuanian glitus "sticky," glitas "mucus;" Old Church Slavonic glina "clay," glenu "slime, mucus;" Old Irish glenim "I cleave, adhere;" Old English cliða "plaster." But Beekes writes that "Not all comparisons are convincing," and notes that most words cited are from Balto-Slavic or Germanic, "which suggests European substrate origin."

In Scripture, the stuff from which the body of the first man was formed; hence "human body" (especially when dead). As an adjective, "formed of clay," 1520s. Clay-pigeon "saucer of baked clay used as a flying target in trap-shooting," in place of live birds, is from 1881. Feet of clay "fundamental weakness" is from Daniel ii.33.

Entries linking to clay

1540s, "act of uniting by glue," from Latin agglutinationem (nominative agglutinatio), noun of action from past-participle stem of agglutinare "fasten with glue, stick on," from ad "to" (see ad-) + glutinare "to glue," from gluten "glue" (from PIE *glei- "clay," also forming words with a sense of "to stick together;" see clay). The use in philology is from mid-17c.

"having the power or tendency to unite or adhere," 1630s, originally in a medical sense, from Latin agglutinat-, past-participle stem of agglutinare "stick on, fasten with glue," from ad "to" (see ad-) + glutinare "to glue," from gluten "glue" (from PIE *glei- "clay," also forming words with a sense of "to stick together;" see clay). Philological sense is from 1650s.

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Trends of clay

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

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