wisdom tooth

See also: wisdom-tooth

English

Etymology

From wisdom + tooth, calque of Latin dēns sapientiae, which is itself a calque of Ancient Greek σωφρονιστῆρες (sōphronistêres, prudent or self-controlled ones (i.e. teeth)), because they arrive approximately when one has reached the age of prudence or wisdom.[1] Compare also German Weisheitszahn (wisdom tooth), Danish visdomstand (wisdom tooth), Swedish visdomstand (wisdom tooth), Icelandic vísdómstönn (wisdom tooth), Dutch verstandskies (wisdom tooth, literally intellect molar), German Low German Verstandskuus (wisdom tooth, literally wisdom molar). Even Chinese 智齒, Russian зуб мудрости (zub mudrosti) and Finnish viisaudenhammas mean "tooth of wisdom".

Noun

wisdom tooth (plural wisdom teeth)

  1. (dentistry) One of the four (one upper and one lower on each side) rearmost molars in humans, which typically develop between ages 18-24.

Translations

References

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.