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Aisle - 5 dictionary results

aisle

[ahyl]
–noun
1. a walkway between or along sections of seats in a theater, classroom, or the like.
2. Architecture.
a. a longitudinal division of an interior area, as in a church, separated from the main area by an arcade or the like.
b. any of the longitudinal divisions of a church or the like.
3. in the aisles, (of an audience) convulsed with laughter.

Origin:
1350–1400; alter. (with ai < F aile wing) of earlier isle (with s from isle ), ile; r. ME ele < MF < L āla wing, c. axle. See ala


aisled, adjective
aisle   (īl)   
n.  
  1. A part of a church divided laterally from the nave by a row of pillars or columns.
  2. A passageway between rows of seats, as in an auditorium or an airplane.
  3. A passageway for inside traffic, as in a department store, warehouse, or supermarket.

[Alteration (influenced by isle and French aile, wing) of Middle English ele, from Old French, wing of a building, from Latin āla.]

Aisle

Aisle\, n. [OF. ele, F. aile, wing, wing of a building, L. ala, contr. fr. axilla.] (Arch.) (a) A lateral division of a building, separated from the middle part, called the nave, by a row of columns or piers, which support the roof or an upper wall containing windows, called the clearstory wall. (b) Improperly used also for the have; -- as in the phrases, a church with three aisles, the middle aisle. (c) Also (perhaps from confusion with alley), a passage into which the pews of a church open.
Language Translation for : Aisle
Spanish: pasillo,
German: der Gang,
Japanese: 通路

aisle 
c.1370, ele, from O.Fr. ele "wing" (of a church), from L. ala, related to axilla "wing, upper arm, armpit," from PIE *aks- "axis" (see axis), via a suffixed form *aks-la-. The root meaning in "turning" connects it with axle and axis. Confused 15c. with unrelated ile "island" (perhaps from notion of a "detached" part of a church), and so it took an -s- when isle did, c.1700; by 1750 it had acquired an a-, on the model of Fr. cognate aile. The word also was confused with alley, which gave it the sense of "passage between rows of pews or seats" (1731), which was then extended to railway cars, theaters, etc.

aisle

portion of a church or basilica that parallels or encircles the major sections of the structure, such as the nave, choir, or apse (aisles around the apse are usually called ambulatories). The aisle is often set off by columns or by an arcade.

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