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Origin and history of zenith
zenith(n.)
"point of the heavens directly overhead at any place," late 14c., zineth, from Old French cenith (Anglo-French zenith, Modern French zénith) and directly from Medieval Latin zyneth, zymeth, cenit, senit, bungled scribal transliterations of Arabic samt "road, path," abbreviation of samt ar-ras, literally "the way over the head." Letter -m- misread as -ni-.
The Medieval Latin word could as well be influenced by the rough agreement of the Arabic term with classical Latin semita "sidetrack, side path" (notion of "thing going off to the side"), from se- "apart" + *mi-ta-, a suffixed form of PIE root *mei- (1) "to change, go, move."
The figurative sense of "highest point or state" of anything capable of having one is from c. 1600. Related: Zenithal.
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