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Word History: Our word fraction did not originally have a mathematical sense. It goes back ultimately to the Latin verb frangere, "to break." From the stem of the past participle frāctus is derived Late Latin frāctiō(stem frāctiōn-), "a breaking" or "a breaking in pieces," as in the breaking of the Eucharistic Host. In Medieval Latin the word frāctiō developed its mathematical sense, which was taken into Middle English along with the word. The earliest recorded sense of our word is "an aliquot part of a unit, a fraction or subdivision," found in a work by Chaucer written about 1400. One of the next recorded instances of the word recalls its origins, referring to the "brekying or fraccioun" of a bone.

fraction. (n.d.). The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition. Retrieved November 17, 2007, from Dictionary.com website: http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/fraction

latin word fractio meaning to break

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Q: Where did the word fraction come from?
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