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by wu-ikkyu
3018 days ago
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>The word censor comes from a Latin word for a government official who, well, censored things. Do you have a source for this? The latin word censere does not seem to be defined only as government officials silencing opinions they don't like: >Definitions:assess, count/reckon, decree, vote, determine, recommend
think/suppose,judge http://latin-dictionary.net/definition/8896/censeo-censere-c... >Maybe you think the word has a different meaning It was simias who thinks the word has a different meaning, which is why I cited the dictionary. Do you think the dictionary is wrong? |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_censor
The name of the Roman office was based on "censere" but had a more specific meaning, and it's that which evolved into the English word "censor", due to the "supervising public morality" part of the censors' job. But the meaning shifted in the process. The Roman censors didn't "censor" anything in the modern sense; rather, they judged people for violations of public morality.