Anonymous ID: 09a41a March 28, 2020, 4:59 p.m. No.8604732   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun

>>8604591

>satellites

 

1540s, "follower or attendant of a superior person," from Middle French satellite (14c.), from Latin satellitem (nominative satelles) "an attendant" upon a distinguished person; "a body-guard, a courtier; an assistant," in Cicero often in a bad sense, "an accomplice, accessory" in a crime, etc. A word of unknown origin. Perhaps from Etruscan satnal (Klein), or a compound of roots satro- "full, enough" + leit- "to go" (Tucker); compare English follow, which is constructed of similar roots. De Vaan has nothing on it.

 

Meaning "planet that revolves about a larger one" first attested 1660s, in reference to the moons of Jupiter, from Latin satellites, which was used in this sense 1610s by German astronomer Johannes Kepler (1571-1630). Galileo, who had discovered them, called them Sidera Medicรฆa in honor of the Medici family. Meaning "man-made machinery orbiting the Earth" first recorded 1936 as theory, 1957 as fact. Meaning "country dependent and subservient to another" is recorded from 1800.