Some information about the English word over the centuries is at | Priesner, Claus and Figala, Karin |
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The dictionaries used to compile the list are these: , , , , , , , , by Raja Tazi year 1998 , a | Dozy's original summary is in his 1869 book |
The Devil's Doctor : Paracelsus And The World Of Renaissance Magic And Science.
28Medical term: overly frequent or abnormal use as in stammering of the sound of the letter n | Footnotes for individual words have supplementary other references |
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Priesner and Figala, entry on "Alkohol"• At the port of Marseille in the 1st half of the 13th century notarized commercial contracts have dozens of instances of Latin avariis ablative plural of avaria , as published in | New York: Farrar, Strauss and Giroux |
On the basis of the above points, the inferential step is made that the Latinate word came or probably came from the Arabic word.
5; so far certainly rooted in French gala, show - from Italian gala, finery Mulatto disputed etymology either from Spanish mulato, diminutive of 'mule' or Arabic | ; usually derived as O |
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A Dictionary of Modern Written Arabic Arabic-English , 4th ed | A set of medieval Latin records of avaria at Genoa is in the downloadable lexicon , by Sergio Aprosio, year 2001, avaria in Volume 1 pages 115-116 |
The seaport of Genoa is the location of the earliest-known record in European languages, year 1157.
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