(Translated by https://www.hiragana.jp/)
story | Etymology of story by etymonline
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story (n.1)

"connected account or narration, oral or written," c. 1200, originally "narrative of important events or celebrated persons of the past, true or presumed to be; history," from Anglo-French storie, estorie, Old French estoire "story, chronicle, history," and directly from Late Latin storia, shortened from Latin historia "history, account, tale, story" (see history).

A story is by derivation a short history, and by development a narrative designed to interest and please. [Century Dictionary]

The non-historical sense of "account of some happening or events alleged to have happened" is by late 14c., but the word was not differentiated from history until 1500s and was used at first also in most of the senses of history. In Middle English a storier was a historian (early 14c. as a surname), storial (adj.) was "historically true, dealing with history," and a book of story was a history book. For the sense evolution compare Gaelic seanachas "history, antiquity," also "story, tale, narration," from sean "old, ancient" + cuis "a matter, affair, circumstance."

The literary sense of "tale in more or less imaginative style, narrative of fictitious events meant to entertain" is from c. 1500. The sense of "plot or intrigue of a novel or drama" is by 1715; story-line "plot-line of a novel or drama" is attested by 1941.

The meaning "humorous anecdote, incident related for interest or entertainment" is by early 15c. As "facts or events of a given case considered in sequence," c. 1600. The meaning "report or descriptive article in a newspaper" is by 1892. As a euphemism for "a lie, a falsehood" it dates from 1690s.

Whole story "full account of the matter" is from 1660s. Another story "different matter requiring different treatment" is attested by 1818. Story of my life "sad truth" first recorded 1938, from a typical title of an autobiography. In late 14c. naked story was "unvarnished account."

also from c. 1200

story (n.2)

"stage or subdivision of the height of a house, habitable space between a floor and a ceiling of a building," c. 1400, storie, also used of the external walls, from Anglo-Latin historia "floor of a building" (c. 1200), also "picture," from Latin historia (see history).

"Perhaps so called because the front of buildings in the Middle Ages often were decorated with rows of painted windows" [Barnhart]. English story (n.1) also had the sense of "a historical picture, a scene from history or legend in painting, sculpture, needlework, etc." by c. 1300, after Medieval Latin, and compare attic (n.).

also from c. 1400
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updated on March 15, 2022

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