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Aerie English Milton Latin Nest Dwellings Referred February

Word aerie
Date October 26, 2019
Type noun
Syllables AIR-ee
Etymology English poet John Milton put a variant of aerie to good use in Paradise Lost (1667), writing, "… there the eagle and the stork / On cliffs and cedar tops their eyries build." But Milton wasn't the first to use the term, which comes to us via Medieval Latin and Old French and probably traces to an earlier Latin word, ager, meaning "field." English speakers had been employing aerie as a word for a bird's nest for more than a century when he penned those words. Eventually, aerie was applied to human dwellings as well as birds' nests. At first, this sense referred to dwellings nestled high up in mountains or hills. These days, you're also likely to hear high-rise city apartments or offices referred to as "aeries."
Examples "Cradled in the limbs of an ancient (unharmed) oak, the rustic Barn Owl Tree House is a cedar-paneled aerie overlooking the valley." — Dale Leatherman, The Washingtonian, February 5, 2019

"A quarter-mile uphill from a cul-de-sac…, there is a 30-foot-wide gate beyond which lies another place of mythic proportions …, a 157-acre hilltop aerie with a series of sprawling, manicured fields on an escarpment rising to 1,360 feet in California's Santa Monica Mountains…." — Alex Bhattacharji, Town & Country, February 2019
Definition 1 : the nest of a bird on a cliff or a mountaintop
2 : an elevated often secluded dwelling, structure, or position

Tags: wordoftheday::noun

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