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</html><thumbnail_url>https://www.healthbenefitstimes.com/glossary/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/Table.jpg</thumbnail_url><thumbnail_width>800</thumbnail_width><thumbnail_height>800</thumbnail_height><description>When the word table entered English sometime before the tenth century, it did not refer to an article of furniture found in a kitchen&#x2014;or anywhere else for that matter&#x2014;but rather to a wooden board or a flat slab of rock. Not surprisingly, therefore, when table did shift in meaning at the beginning of the fourteenth century, it first came to mean a compact surface made of stone, wax, or other material used for writing upon. It was not until late in the fourteenth century that table came to mean a flat surface with legs, upon which food is served. Nor was this the end of the word's expansion of meaning: in the late fifteenth century the plural tables came to mean the two sides of a backgammon board; an unlucky player would turn the tables&#x2014;or in other words rotate the board&#x2014;to try to change his fortune. The Latin tabula is the ultimate source of table, and from this Latin word English also gets tablet&#x2014;literally meaning little table&#x2014;and tabloid. The word tabloid was devised in 1884 by an American pharmaceutical company as the trademark name for a pill-sized tablet of concentrated medicine; however, by the beginning of the twentieth century, the concentrated sense of tabloid led to its being applied to the smaller, "condensed" newspapers we now know as tabloids.</description></oembed>
