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Origin and history of very
very(adj.)
late 13c., verrei, verray "true, real, entitled to the name, genuine;" late 14c. "actual, sheer;" from Anglo-French verrai, Old French verai "true, truthful, sincere; right, just, legal," from Vulgar Latin *veracus, from Latin verax (genitive veracis) "truthful," from verus "true" (source also of Italian vero), from PIE root *were-o- "true, trustworthy."
The meaning "greatly, extremely" is by mid-15c. The word was used as a pure intensive by late 14c. Writers in 16c. introduced verier, veriest. The very thing "just what is suitable or requisite" is by 1690s.
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