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===Etymology=== | ===Etymology=== | ||
The word ''diabetes'' comes from Latin diabētēs, which in turn comes from Ancient Greek διαβήτης (diabētēs) which literally means ''a passer through; a siphon.''<cite>51</cite> Ancient Greek physician Aretaeus of Cappadocia (fl. 1st century CE (Common Era)) used that word, with the intended meaning ''excessive discharge of urine'', as the name for the disease.<cite>52</cite><cite>53</cite> Ultimately, the word comes from Greek διαβαίνειν (diabainein), meaning ''to pass through,''<cite>51</cite> which is composed of δια- (dia-), meaning ''through'' and βαίνειν (bainein), meaning ''to go''.< | The word ''diabetes'' comes from Latin diabētēs, which in turn comes from Ancient Greek διαβήτης (diabētēs) which literally means ''a passer through; a siphon.''<cite>51</cite> Ancient Greek physician Aretaeus of Cappadocia (fl. 1st century CE (Common Era)) used that word, with the intended meaning ''excessive discharge of urine'', as the name for the disease.<cite>52</cite><cite>53</cite> Ultimately, the word comes from Greek διαβαίνειν (diabainein), meaning ''to pass through,''<cite>51</cite> which is composed of δια- (dia-), meaning ''through'' and βαίνειν (bainein), meaning ''to go''.<cite>52</cite> The word ''diabetes'' is first recorded in English, in the form ''diabete'', in a medical text written around 1425. | ||
The word '' | The word ''mellitus'' comes from the classical Latin word ''mellitus'', meaning ''mellite''<cite>54</cite> (i.e. sweetened with honey;<cite>54</cite> honey-sweet<cite>55</cite>). The Latin word comes from ''mell''-, which comes from ''mel'', meaning ''honey'';<cite>54</cite><cite>55</cite> sweetness;<cite>55</cite> pleasant thing,<cite>55</cite> and the suffix -''itus'',<cite>54</cite> whose meaning is the same as that of the English suffix ''-ite''.<cite>56</cite> It was Thomas Willis who in 1675 added ''mellitus'' to the word ''diabetes'' as a designation for the disease, when he noticed the urine of a diabetic had a sweet taste (glycosuria).<cite>53</cite> This sweet taste had been noticed in urine by the ancient Greeks, Chinese, Egyptians, Indians, and Persians. | ||
==Society and culture== | ==Society and culture== |
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