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Origin and history of such
such(adj., pron.)
"of that kind, of the like kind or degree," as a pronoun, "such a person or thing," c. 1200, swich, from Old English swylc, swilc "just as, as, in like manner; as if, as though; such a one, he" (pronoun and adjective), from a Proto-Germanic compound *swalikaz "so formed," from *swa "so" (see so) + *likan "form," source of Old English gelic "similar" (see like (adj.)).
The prehistoric compound also is the source of Old Saxon sulik, Old Norse slikr, Old Frisian selik, Middle Dutch selc, Dutch zulk, Old High German sulih, German solch, Gothic swaleiks.
Colloquial suchlike "of the sort previously mentioned; so forth" (early 15c., swich-lik) is pleonastic. Middle English also had an adjective-pronoun suchkin and suchwise "of such a kind" (both late 14c.). No such thing "not at all, nothing at all" is by 1530s.
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