Etymology of the French word organiser
the Old French word
organiserderived from the French word
organederived from the Latin word
organum (implement; organ; organ pipe; mechanical device)
derived from the Greek word
organon, ὄργανον
derived from the Proto-Indo-European root
*werg-derived from the Greek word
organumderived from the Proto-Indo-European root
*werg-derived from the Medieval Latin word
organizare (organize)
derived from the Latin word
organum (implement; organ; organ pipe; mechanical device)
derived from the Greek word
organon, ὄργανον
derived from the Proto-Indo-European root
*werg-derived from the Greek word
organumderived from the Proto-Indo-European root
*werg-Date
The earliest known usage of organiser in French dates from the 14th century.
Derivations in French
désorganiser,
organisateur,
organisation,
réorganiser,
organigramme,
organisable,
organisantDerivations in other languages
English
organizer, English
organize, Romanian
organizaCognates
Dutch
kroon, Dutch
luster, Dutch
organiseren, Dutch
trompet, English
corona, English
crown, English
lustre, English
trumpet, English
organize, French
ordinal, French
parvenir, French
courir, French
couronne, French
mûrir, French
terrible, French
trompette, French
sonneur, German
Korona, German
Krone, German
Kronleuchter, German
Lüster, German
organisieren, German
Trompete, Icelandic
kóróna, Icelandic
ljósa-króna, Italian
corona, Italian
correre, Italian
maturare, Italian
organizzare, Italian
pervenire, Italian
terribile, Latin
currere, Lithuanian
organizuoti, Norwegian
krone, Norwegian
lysekrone, Norwegian
organisere, Norwegian
trompet, Polish
organizować, Portuguese
trombeta, Portuguese
coroa, Portuguese
terrivel, Russian
организовать, Spanish
trompeta, Spanish
corona, Swedish
korona, Swedish
krona, Swedish
ljuskrona, Swedish
lyster, Swedish
organisera, Swedish
trumpet, Yiddish
krojnUsage
Word found in Old French