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sustain (v.)

late 13c., sustenen, transitive, "provide the necessities of life to;" by early 14c. as "give support to (an effort or cause); also in physical senses, "keep from falling or sinking, hold up or upright;" also "give assistance to; keep (a quarrel, etc.) going." It is from the stem of Old French sostenir, sustenir "hold up, bear; suffer, endure" (13c.), from Latin sustinere "hold up, hold upright; furnish with means of support; bear, undergo, endure." This is from an assimilated form of sub "up from below" (see sub-) + tenere "to hold" (from PIE root *ten- "to stretch").

The meaning "continue, keep up" (an action, etc.) is from early 14c. The sense of "withstand, endure (pain hardship, a shock) without failing or yielding" is from c. 1400. The legal sense of "admit as correct and valid, uphold the rightfulness of" is from early 15c. Also from early 15c. as "suffer (a loss)."

The past-participle adjective sustained is attested by 1775 as "kept up or maintained uniformly," originally of music notes; the piano's sustaining pedal is so called by 1889.

also from late 13c.
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Trends of sustain

updated on November 03, 2023

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