average
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Middle French avarie, from Old French avarie, from Old Italian avaria (which is possibly from Arabic عَوَارِيَّة (ʕawāriyya, “damaged goods”), from عَوَار (ʕawār, “fault, blemish, defect, flaw”), from عَوِرَ (ʕawira, “to lose an eye”)) + English suffix -age.
average (plural averages)
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average (comparative more average, superlative most average)
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average (third-person singular simple present averages, present participle averaging, simple past and past participle averaged)
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From Middle English average, from Medieval Latin averagium, from aver (“horse or other beast of burden, service required from the same”) from Old English eafor (“obligation to carry goods and convey messages for one's lord”) from aferian (“to remove, take away”); + -age.
average (plural averages)
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average (indeclinable)
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