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Origin and history of stream

stream(n.)

Middle English strem "course of water, current of a stream, body of water flowing in a natural channel," from Old English stream, from Proto-Germanic *strauma- (source also of Old Saxon strom, Old Norse straumr, Danish strøm, Swedish ström, Norwegian straum, Old Frisian stram, Dutch stroom, Old High German stroum, German Strom "current, river"), from PIE root *sreu- "to flow."

Boutkan writes, "The Gmc. insertion of the -t- in the cluster *sr is automatic," and compares Old English swester "sister" from PIE *swesr-.

From early 12c. as "anything issuing from a source and flowing continuously." Also sometimes in Old English and Middle English "the ocean, the sea," or a navigable channel of it; the meaning "steady current in the sea" (as in Gulf Stream) is recorded from late 14c., as is the sense of "steady current in a river."

The general sense of "continued course or current (of anything) moving in the same direction" is by 1580s. Stream of thought is from 1890 in psychology. Stream of consciousness in literary criticism is recorded by 1930, earlier in psychology (1855).

stream(v.)

early 13c., stremen, of water, blood, sweat, etc., "flow copiously, move or run in a continuous current," from stream (n.). The transitive sense of "pour out or discharge in a stream, cause to flow as a liquid" is from late 14c. Related: Streamed; streaming. Compare German strömen, Dutch stroomen, Danish strömme, all verbs from nouns. Of air, c. 1300; of light from late 14c.; of flags, 1550s, of hair, 1731.

Entries linking to stream

also bloodstream, "the blood circulating through the body," 1847, from blood (n.) + stream (n.).

"with or in the direction of the current of a stream," 1706, from the prepositional phrase; see down (adv.) + stream (n.). As an adjective by 1842. Middle English had the prepositional phrase down the water (c. 1400).

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Trends of stream

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

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