Natural Air-condition
by Marcia Lee Jones
Title
Natural Air-condition
Artist
Marcia Lee Jones
Medium
Photograph - Photography
Description
A story behind every window.
The word window originates from the Old Norse 'vindauga', from 'vindr � wind' and 'auga�eye', i.e., wind eye. In Norwegian Nynorsk and Icelandic the Old Norse form has survived to this day (in Icelandic only as a less used synonym to gluggi), in Swedish the word vind�ga remains as a term for a hole through the roof of a hut, and in the Danish language 'vindue' and Norwegian Bokm�l 'vindu', the direct link to 'eye' is lost, just like for 'window'. The Danish (but not the Bokm�l) word is pronounced fairly similarly to window.
Window is first recorded in the early 13th century, and originally referred to an unglazed hole in a roof. Window replaced the Old English eag�yrl, which literally means 'eye-hole,' and 'eagduru' 'eye-door'. Many Germanic languages however adopted the Latin word 'fenestra' to describe a window with glass, such as standard Swedish 'f�nster', or German 'Fenster'. The use of window in English is probably because of the Scandinavian influence on the English language by means of loanwords during the Viking Age. In English the word fenester was used as a parallel until the mid-18th century and fenestration is still used to describe the arrangement of windows within a fa�ade. Also, words such as "defenestration" are in use, meaning to throw something out of a window.
Uploaded
September 17th, 2013
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