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quote (v.)

late 14c., coten, "to mark (a book) with chapter numbers or marginal references," from Old French coter, from Medieval Latin quotare "distinguish by numbers, number chapters," from Latin quotus "which in order? what number (in sequence)?," from quot "how many," from PIE *kwo-ti-, from pronominal root *kwo-.

The sense development is via "to give as a reference, to cite as an authority" (1570s) to "to copy out or repeat exact words" (1670s). Modern spelling with qu- is from early 15c. The business sense of "to state the price of a commodity" (1866) revives the etymological meaning. Related: Quoted; quoting.

quote (n.)

"a quotation," 1885, from quote (v.). From c. 1600 as "a marginal reference." Quotes for "quotation marks" is from 1869.

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Definitions of quote from WordNet
1
quote (v.)
repeat a passage from;
He quoted the Bible to her
Synonyms: cite
quote (v.)
name the price of;
quote prices for cars
quote (v.)
refer to for illustration or proof;
He said he could quote several instances of this behavior
Synonyms: cite
quote (v.)
put quote marks around;
2
quote (n.)
a punctuation mark used to attribute the enclosed text to someone else;
Synonyms: quotation mark / inverted comma
quote (n.)
a passage or expression that is quoted or cited;
Synonyms: quotation / citation
From wordnet.princeton.edu