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Origin and history of espalier

espalier(n.)

fan-shaped trellis for ornamental or fruit trees, 1660s, from French espalier (16c.), from Italian spalliera "stake-works shoulder-high," from spalla "shoulder," from Latin spatula (see spatula).

Entries linking to espalier

"broad, flat, unsharpened blade with a handle," 1520s (early 15c. as a type of medical instrument), from Latin spatula "broad piece, spatula," diminutive of spatha "broad, flat tool or weapon," from Greek spathē "broad flat blade" used as a tool by weavers, also "blade of a sword, blade of an oar, palm leaf" (see spade (n.1)).

The pure Latin word seems to have disturbed the English tongue, it sometimes was Anglicized as spatule (late 14c.), spattle (mid-15c.), also, with altered ending, spature (late 14c. as an instrument used to mix medicines), and garbled spartle. The erroneous spattular (n.) is attested from c. 1600 (for form, compare scapular).

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