Etymology:
The word "alar" has multiple origins:
Meaning:
Origin:
The Latin word "ala" originally referred to the wing of a bird or a flap used to direct airflow. It later came to be used in the military to describe a unit of soldiers, typically cavalry, deployed on the wings of an army.
The Greek word "ἀλώρ" (álōr) is believed to have originally referred to a raised, open-air platform used for threshing grain. It is related to the verb "ἀλοάω" (aloáo, to thresh), which is derived from the Proto-Indo-European root "*h₂el-" (to separate, to grind).
Over time, the two meanings of "alar" (as pertaining to wings or threshing floors) became conflated in some contexts. For example, in architecture, "alar" can refer to either a wing-shaped addition to a building or a raised platform for drying or storing crops.
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Etymology The word alar has multiple origins Latin ala wing Greek ἀλώρ
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