of

UK: ɒv | US: ʌv

Definition
  1. prep. indicating origin, belonging, or relation

  2. prep. expressing material or composition

  3. prep. introducing a descriptive phrase

Structure

No data yet.

Etymology

"Of" traces back to Old English of, derived from Proto-Germanic af, meaning "away, away from." It shares roots with Old Norse af and Gothic af. Over time, its meaning broadened from purely directional ("away from") to express abstract relations (possession, origin, etc.). As English evolved, it lost its original spatial force but retained core relational functions, becoming one of the most versatile prepositions.

Examples

No data yet.