The Old English verb "forgān" is the ancestor of the modern English verb "forgo". It meant "to remove" or "to take away". Over time, its meaning evolved to include "to go or pass by" and "to refrain from doing something". The modern sense of "to give up or relinquish something" developed in the 16th century.
Etymology Middle English forgon forgehen from Old English forgān forgietan Proto
Etymology Middle English fore from Old English fore in front of before in time or p
Foregoing Etymology Middle English forgon from Old English forgān past participle o
Etymology and Meaning Optometry Derived from the Greek words οπτός optos mea
Etymology Middle English forfeiten from Anglo Norman French forfeter from Old French
Etymology Old French waiver weyver Late Latin waiviare Frankish waihan to abandon
Etymology Old French relenquir Latin relinquere Proto Italic lik Proto Indo Europe
Etymology Origin Middle English abandonar from Old French abandoner from Late Latin
Etymology Latin prae meaning before Latin cēdere meaning to go Meaning T
Etymology Old French clamer reclamer Late Latin clamare to cry out call for Indo
Etymology of Malic The word malic is derived from the Latin word malum which means
Etymology The word lapse originates from the Latin verb labi meaning to slip fall
Etymology Late Middle English from Old French compromis from Latin compromissum from