a (1)

indefinite article, the form of an used before consonants, mid-12c., a weakened form of Old English an “one” (see an). The disappearance of the -n- before consonants was mostly complete by mid-14c. After c. 1600 the -n- also began to vanish before words beginning with a sounded -h-; it still is retained by many writers before unaccented syllables in h- or (e)u- but is now no longer normally spoken as such. The -n- also lingered (especially in southern England dialect) before -w- and -y- through 15c.

It also is used before nouns of singular number and a few plural nouns when few or great many is interposed.

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a (2)

as in twice a day, etc., a reduced form of Old English an “on” (see on (prep.)), in this case “on each.” The sense was extended from time to measure, price, place, etc. The habit of tacking a onto a gerund (as in a-hunting we will go) was archaic after 18c.

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first letter of the Roman alphabet, based on Greek alpha (see alpha). In music from c. 1600 as the name of the sixth note of the natural scale; it is the note given by a fixed-tone instrument (usually oboe or organ) to which all the instruments of an orchestra are tuned. As a blood type, 1926, denoting A agglutinogens. The A side of a two-sided record (by 1962, see side (n.)) held the material chosen for promotion. A-bomb, short for atom bomb, was in newspaper headlines by Aug. 8, 1945.

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a- (2)

word-forming element meaning “away,” from Latin a “off, of, away from,” the usual form of Latin ab before consonants (see ab-). As in avertavocation. It is also the a in a priori and the à in Thomas à KempisThomas à Becket.

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-a (1)

word-forming element which in English is characteristic of fem. nouns and adjectives of Latin or Greek origin (such as ideacomamaniabasilicaarenaformulanebula). From Latin -a (plural -ae) and Greek -a (plural -ai, Latinized as -ae). The Latin suffix also became Italian -a (plural -e), Spanish -a (plural -as). It is represented in Old English by -u-e, but even then the suffix was fading and by the time of modern English was totally lost or swallowed into silent final -e-.

It also appears in Romanic words from Latin that have been borrowed into English, such as operaplazaarmada. It figures in scientific names coined in Modern Latin (amoebasodamagnolia, etc.) and is common in geographical names formed according to Latin or Greek models (AsiaAfricaAmericaArabiaFlorida, etc.)

In English it marks sex only in personal names (JuliaMariaAlberta) and in a few words from Italian or Spanish where a corresponding male form also is in use (donnasenora).

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-a (2)

nominative neuter plural ending of certain nouns and adjectives in Latin and Greek that have been adopted into English (phenomenadatamediacriteria, etc.). It also is common in biology in Modern Latin formations of class names (MammaliaReptiliaCrustacea).

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a- (3)

prefix meaning “not, without,” from Greek a-an- “not” (the “alpha privative”), from PIE root *ne- “not” (source also of English un-).

In words from Greek, such as abysmaladamantamethyst; also partly nativized as a prefix of negation (asexualamoralagnostic). The ancient alpha privatum, denoting want or absence.

Greek also had an alpha copulativuma- or ha-, expressing union or likeness, which is the a- expressing “together” in acolyteacousticAdelphi, etc. It is from PIE root *sem- (1) “one; as one, together with.”

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a- (1)

prefix or inseparable particle, a conglomerate of various Germanic and Latin elements.

In words derived from Old English, it commonly represents Old English an “on, in, into” (see on (prep.)), as in aliveaboveasleepabackabroadafootashoreaheadabedaside, obsolete arank “in rank and file,” athree (adv.) “into three parts,” etc. In this use it forms adjectives and adverbs from nouns, with the notion “in, at; engaged in,” and is identical to a (2).

It also can represent Middle English of (prep.) “off, from,” as in anewafreshakinabreast. Or it can be a reduced form of the Old English past participle prefix ge-, as in aware.

Or it can be the Old English intensive a-, originally ar- (cognate with German er- and probably implying originally “motion away from”), as in abideariseawakeashamed, marking a verb as momentary, a single event. Such words sometimes were refashioned in early modern English as though the prefix were Latin (accursedallayaffright).

In words from Romanic languages, often it represents reduced forms of Latin ad “to, toward; for” (see ad-), or ab “from, away, off” (see ab-); both of which by about 7c. had been reduced to a in the ancestor of Old French. In a few cases it represents Latin ex.

[I]t naturally happened that all these a- prefixes were at length confusedly lumped together in idea, and the resultant a- looked upon as vaguely intensive, rhetorical, euphonic, or even archaic, and wholly otiose. [OED, 1989]

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A-1 

also A1A-one, “first-rate,” 1837 (in Dickens); a figurative use from Lloyd’s of London marine insurance company’s system for selective rating of merchant vessels (“Register of British and Foreign Shipping”), where it is the designation for ships in first-class condition. The letter refers to the condition of the hull of the ship itself, and the number rating to the equipment. Also used in equivalent ratings in U.S., where colloquially it is sometimes expanded to A No. 1 (which is attested by 1848 as top rating of entries in an agricultural fair).

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A.A. 

also AA, abbreviation of Alcoholics Anonymous, attested by 1941, American English. The group name was the title of a book published in 1938 by the founder, Bill W. From 1914 as an abbreviation of anti-aircraft guns.

Source: O
etymonline.com
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