keep
/kiːp/
UK: [kʰɪjp]
keep
English
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Definition
To continue in (a course or mode of action); to not intermit or fall from; to uphold or maintain.
Etymology
From Middle English kepen (“to keep, guard, look after, watch”), from Old English cēpan (“to seize, hold, observe”), from Proto-West Germanic *kōpijan, from Proto-Germanic *kōpijaną (“to look, heed, watch, observe”) (compare West Frisian kypje (“to look”)), from Proto-Indo-European *ǵab-, *ǵāb- (“to look after”) (compare Lithuanian žẽbti (“to eat reluctantly”), Russian забо́та (zabóta, “care, worry”)). The dialectal sense of the verb meaning “to put back” or “put away” may be analyzed as a semantic loan from a local language—compare Welsh cadw and Mandarin 收 (shōu).
Example Sentences
- "to keep silence; to keep possession"
- "to keep one's word; to keep one's promise"
- "Both day and night did we keep company."
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