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Etymology of the French word intégral

the French word intégral
derived from the Latin word integralis (integral; complete)
derived from the Latin word integer (fresh troops; untouched, entire, whole)
derived from the Latin word in-
derived from the Latin word tangere (touch, strike; border on)
derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *tag- (to touch)
using the Latin prefix in- (suffix for no)
derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *ne (not)

Date

The earliest known usage of intégral in French dates from the 14th century.

Derivations in French

intégralement, intégralisme

Derivations in other languages

Romanian integral

Cognates

English integral, French intègre, German integral, Italian integrale, Italian integro, Latin integer, Lithuanian integralus, Russian интегpaльный, Spanish integral, Spanish integro



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