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Origin and history of turn

turn(v.)

Middle English turnen, from late Old English turnian "rotate, revolve; move about an axis, center, or fixed position," also in part from Old French torner, tornier, Anglo-French turner "turn away or around; draw aside, cause to turn; change, transform; turn on a lathe" (Modern French tourner).

All are from Latin tornare "to polish, round off, fashion, turn on a lathe," from tornus "lathe," from Greek tornos "lathe, tool for drawing circles" (reconstructed in Watkins to be from PIE root *tere- (1) "to rub, turn").

From late 12c. as "change position or orientation so as to face or point in a different direction," hence "change course, go in a different direction." In reference to the tide, etc., "reverse course or direction," c. 1300.

Transitive senses in English are from c. 1200 as "cause to shift so as to face in a different direction;" by c. 1300 as "cause a change of course." Related: Turned; turning.

Many figurative senses and expressions (turn (something) into (something else)) likely grew from the notion of "shape (something) while rotating it on a lathe or wheel, form or fashion (a piece of wood or metal) with a chisel while the object is rotated," the classical sense, attested in English by mid-14c. "Execute in round outlines," hence "form, fashion, or shape in any way" (1610s).

From late 12c. as "cause to undergo transmutation from one substance to another." Hence "change in a character or property" (color, thickness, mass, etc.), c. 1300, also transitive. The sense of "become sour or tainted" is by 1570s.

Also from late 12c. as "lead to" (grief, advantage, etc.), "result as a consequence of;" from c. 1200 as "come to pass, happen, occur." Also from c, 1200 as "become inverted, assume a reverse or contrary position;" also "repel" (evil, danger); "rout in battle." By c. 1300 as "shift allegiance, shift loyalties, change sides," also transitive.

To turn down (v.) "reject" is recorded by 1891, American English. To turn in "go to bed" is attested from 1690s, originally nautical. Turn to "look to for help or hope, have recourse" is from late 14c. 

To turn the stomach "nauseate" is recorded from 1620s. To turn (something) loose "set free" is recorded from 1590s. To turn up one's nose as an expression of contempt is attested from 1779.

turn(n.)

13c., "action of rotating; a revolution about an axis, movement about a center," also as a wrestling maneuver, from Anglo-French tourn (Old French torn, tour), from Latin tornus "turning lathe" (see turn (v.)); also partly from turn (v.).

From early 14c. as "a turning aside from one's course, deviation from one's path;" by early 15c. in a physical sense, "a turning into another or different way." The sense of "angle, curve, place of bending" (in a road, river, etc.) also is by early 15c.

By late 14c. as "a change in position so as to face in another direction," also "change in a state of affairs."

The sense of "act or deed" (as in good turn) is recorded from c. 1300. The meaning "an individual's time for action, when these go around in succession," is recorded from early 14c. (to take turns is from mid-14c.); specifically as "spell of work" from late 14c.

The meaning "beginning of a period of time" is attested from 1853 (as in turn-of-the-century, which is from 1921 as an adjectival phrase).

Phrase done to a turn (1780) suggests meat roasted on a spit. The turn of the screw (1796) is the additional twist to tighten its hold, sometimes with reference to torture by thumbscrews.

Entries linking to turn

"the outline of a figure," 1660s, a term in painting and sculpture, from French contour "circumference, outline," from Italian and Medieval Latin contornare "to go around," from assimilated form of Latin com-, here perhaps an intensive prefix (see com-), + tornare "to turn (on a lathe);" see turn (v.).

Application to topography is from 1769. Earlier the word was used to mean "bedspread, quilt" (early 15c.) in reference to its falling over the sides of the mattress. Contour line in geography is from 1844. Contour-chair, one designed to fit the curves of the body, is from 1949.

As a verb, "mark with contour lines; form to the contours of," 1871. Related: Contoured.

"a roundabout or circuitous way," 1738, from French détour, from Old French destor "side road, byway; evasion, excuse," from destorner "turn aside," from des- "aside" (see dis-) + tourner "to turn" (see turn (v.)). In 18c. usually figurative. Usually treated as a French word in English (with italics and the accent mark) until late 19c.

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Trends of turn

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

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