Want to remove ads? Log in to see fewer ads, and become a Premium Member to remove all ads.
Origin and history of Ariel
Ariel
1382, in the Wycliffe Bible, a word taken untranslated from the Vulgate, from Greek ariel (Septuagint), from Hebrew ariel; in later Bibles, translated as "altar."
(Gesenius would here translate "fire-hearth of God," after Arab. arr; elsewhere in O.T. the same word occurs as a man's name, and appellation of Jerusalem, where it is taken as = "lion of God.") Ariel in T. Heywood and Milton is the name of an angel, in Shakespeare of "an Ayrie spirit"; in Astron. of one of the satellites of Uranus. [OED]
As the name of a species of gazelle found in the Middle East, 1832, from Arabic aryil, variant of ayyil "stag." The Uranian satellite was discovered in 1851.
Want to remove ads? Log in to see fewer ads, and become a Premium Member to remove all ads.
More to explore
Share Ariel
Want to remove ads? Log in to see fewer ads, and become a Premium Member to remove all ads.
Want to remove ads? Log in to see fewer ads, and become a Premium Member to remove all ads.
Want to remove ads? Log in to see fewer ads, and become a Premium Member to remove all ads.