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Origin and history of worry

worry(v.)

c. 1300, wirien, "to slay, kill or injure by biting and shaking the throat" (as a dog or wolf does), from Old English wyrgan, wirgan, wirigan "to strangle," from Proto-Germanic *wurgjan, from *wergh- (reconstructed in Watkins to be from PIE root *wer- (2) "to turn, bend").

The figurative meaning "to annoy, bother, vex" is by c. 1400; the "strangle" sense generally was obsolete in English after c. 1600. The meaning "cause mental distress or trouble" is attested from 1822; the intransitive sense of "to feel anxiety or mental trouble" is attested by 1860.

Germanic cognates include Middle Dutch worghen, Dutch worgen, Old High German wurgen, German würgen "to strangle," Old Norse virgill "rope." Related: Worried. 

worry

worry(n.)

"harassing anxiety arising from cares and troubles," 1804, from worry (v.). By 1813 as a cause or instance of this.

worry

Entries linking to worry

1530s, "animal that bites and attacks others," agent noun from worry (v.). By 1891 as "one who worries himself."

"causing worry or annoyance," 1828, from worry (n.) + -some (1). Related: Worrisomely; worrisomeness.

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Trends of worry

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

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