obey
Etymology
From Middle English obeyen, from Anglo-Norman obeir, obeier et al., Old French obeir, from Latin oboediō (also obēdiō (“to listen to, harken, usually in extended sense, obey, be subject to, serve”)), from ob- (“before, near”) + audiō (“to hear”). Compare audient. In Latin, ob + audire would have been expected to become Classical Latin *obūdiō (compare in + claudō becoming inclūdō), but it has been theorized that the usual law court associations of the word for obeying encouraged a false archaism from ū to oe, to oboediō (compare Old Latin oinos → Classical Latin ūnus).
verb
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(transitive) To do as ordered by (a person, institution etc), to act according to the bidding of. obey the rulesobey your boss -
(intransitive) To do as one is told. Soldiers are trained to obey. -
(obsolete, intransitive) To be obedient, compliant (to a given law, restriction etc.).
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