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kenneth arrow

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Ar⋅row

[ar-oh]
–noun
Kenneth Joseph, born 1921, U.S. economist: Nobel prize 1972.
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
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Word Origin & History

arrow 
O.E. arwan, earlier earh "arrow," possibly borrowed from O.N. ör (gen. örvar), from P.Gmc. *arkhwo (cf. Goth. arhwanza), from PIE base *arku- "bow and/or arrow," source of Latin arcus (see arc). The ground sense would be "the thing belonging to the bow," perhaps a superstitious avoidance of the actual name. A rare word in O.E., where more common words for "arrow" were stræl (cognate with the word still common in Slavic, once prevalent in Gmc., too; meaning related to "flash, streak") and fla, flan, a N.Gmc. word, perhaps with the sense of "splinter." Stræl disappeared by 1200; fla lingered in Scottish until after 1500. Arrowhead is from 1483; ancient ones dug up also were called elf-arrows (17c.). Arrowroot (1696) so called because it was used to absorb toxins from poison-dart wounds.
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2001 Douglas Harper
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