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origins of the word "ass"

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My young son asked me this question, but I can't deliver an answer, except to make broad guesses. Does anyone know for sure?

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Since the above etymology indicates that ass in the sense of buttocks comes from arse, here is the etymology of arse:
arse

Who said it comes from ears?

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deaconB
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Glenn said

Who said it comes from ears?

Random House did, for ass(2) (meaning butt, asshole, or sex actl)

before 1000; var of arse, with loss of r before s, as in passel, cuss, etc.; Middle English ars, er (e) s, Old English ærs, ears; cognate with Old Frisian ers, Dutch aars, Old Norse, Middle Low German, Old Saxon, Old High German ars (German Arsch), Greek órrhos, Armenian or?kh, Hittite arras; akin to Greek our??, Old Irish err tail
 
In high school chemistry, they teach that a reacts with b to form c and d.  In college, we learn that it's not a one-way street; that while a and B form c and D for the most part, there is also c and d forming a and b.  One of my chem engineering profs profs said, if entropy increases with time, then time is only linear for large populations, and individual molecules may go backwards in time.  Interesting take.
 
But I think the same is true in language.  We're always seeing "back-formation".  If a guy is as dumb as an ass, we call him an ass, except asses aere *considerably* smarter than horses.  And we call him an ass because he's as dumb as a women too stupid to do anything except llie on her back.  And we call her moneytmaker an ass, whether or not she's sitting on a beast of burden.  All kinds of back-formation going on, all the time.
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I don't have the Random House, but I would double check if they are referring to the Old English word for ass, which happens to be spelled ears or if they are providing a Modern English translation of some Old English word which somehow meant ears.

Sometimes there are subtle differences in punctuation or font that make big differences in how you understand the etymology as noted in a dictionary.

I strongly suspect ears in this etymology is the spelling of an Old English word for ass and has nothing to do with modern ears.

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