dit·to (d
t
)
n. pl. dit·tos 1. The same as stated above or before.
2. A duplicate; a copy.
3. A pair of small marks ( " ) used to indicated that the word, phrase, or figure given above is to be repeated.
adv. As before.
tr.v. dit·toed,
dit·to·ing,
dit·tos To duplicate (a document, for example).
[Italian dialectal, past participle of Italian
dire,
to say, from Latin
dcere; see
deik- in Indo-European roots.]
Word History: Ditto, which at first glance seems a handy and insignificant sort of word, actually has a Roman past, for it comes from
dictus, "having been said," the past participle of the verb
dcere, "to say." In Italian
dcere became
dire and
dictus became
detto, or in the Tuscan dialect
ditto. Italian
detto or
ditto meant what
said does in English, as in the locution "the said story." Thus the word could be used in certain constructions to mean "the same as what has been said"; for example, having given the date
December 22, one could use
26 detto or
ditto for
26 December. The first recorded use of
ditto in English occurs in such a construction in 1625. The sense "copy" is an English development, first recorded in 1818.
Ditto has even become a trademark for a duplicating machine.
Manny