do

do
\ \ [OE] Not surprisingly, do is a verb of great antiquity. It goes back to the Indo-European base *dhē- (source also of English deed and doom), which signifiedplace, put’. This sense remains uppermost in descendants such as Sanskrit dhāand Greek títhēmi (related to English theme), but a progression tomake, doshows itself in Latin facere (source of English fact and a host of other words) and West Germanic *dōn. ‘Makeis now the central signification of English do, although traces of the earlierput, placesurvive in such fossilized forms as don and doff, anddo someone to death’. Other Germanic relatives include German tun and Dutch doen, but the Scandinavian languages have not adopted the verb, preferring instead fordoone which originally meantmake ready’ (Danish gøre, Swedish gåra) and which is related to English gear.
\ \ Cf.DEED, DOOM, FACT, FASHION, THEME

Word origins - 2ed. . 2005.

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