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Origin and history of medical

medical(adj.)

"pertaining or relating to the art or profession of healing or those who practice it," 1640s, from French médical, from Late Latin medicalis "of a physician," from Latin medicus "physician, surgeon, medical man" (n.); "healing, medicinal" (adj.), from medeor "to cure, heal," originally "know the best course for," from an early specialization of PIE root *med- "take appropriate measures" (source also of Avestan vi-mad- "physician"). "The meaning of medeor is based on a semantic shift from 'measure' to 'distribute a cure, heal'" [de Vaan]. The earlier adjective in English in this sense was medicinal. Related: Medically.

medical(n.)

1917, short for medical examination. Earlier it was colloquial for "a student or practitioner of medicine" (1823).

Entries linking to medical

"having healing or curative properties, suitable for medical use," mid-14c., from Old French medicinal and directly from Latin medicinalis "pertaining to medicine," from medicina "the healing art, medicine; a remedy" (see medicine). Related: Medicinally.

also bio-medical, "pertaining to both biology and medicine," 1961, from bio- + medical (adj.).

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Trends of medical

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

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