even-
English
Etymology
From Middle English even-, efen-, from Old English efen- (“equal, fellow-, co-”), from Proto-Germanic *ebna- (“like-, level, equal-”, prefix/combining form), from *ebnaz (“equal, even”); same as Old English efen (“equal, even, level”). More at even. Cognate with Scots evin- (“equal-”), Old Frisian ivin-, evn- (“even-”), Old High German eban- (“even-”).
Prefix
even-
- (rare, dialectal or no longer productive) Prefix occurring mostly in older terms, bearing the meaning of equal-, co-, fellow-, joint-.
- even-bishop, even-christian, even-knight, even-servant, even-sucker
- Prefix used chiefly in parasynthetic derivatives with the sense of even.
- even-carriaged, even-edged, even-tempered, even-toed, evenwise
- Prefix meaning equally, similarly, same.
- even-clad, even-high, even-right, even-worth, evenmete, evenold
- Prefix meaning evenly, straight, direct, according to.
- even-pleached, even-set, even-spun, even-deed, even-down, even-forth
Derived terms
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