corona

Words nearby corona
Other definitions for corona (2 of 2)
BEHIND THE WORD
Where does corona come from?
Flowers and crows, priests and soldiers, suns and moons, kings and queens, lagers and viruses? What could all these disparate things possibly have in common? Well, in one way or another, they are involved in the rich history of the word corona.
Corona entered English around 1555â65. It was borrowed directly from the Latin corÅna, meaning âgarland, wreath, crown.â Its plural form is corÅnae. A verb form of corÅna was corÅnÄ?re, âto crown, wreathe,â ultimate source of the English coronation, âthe act or ceremony of crowning a king, queen, or other sovereign.â
Letâs start with a glimpse into life in ancient Rome. Back then, a corÅna served various ceremonial and symbolic functions. People wore corÅnae of flowers at festivals, for example, or used them to ornament images of gods. Priests donned corÅnae when performing important rituals and sacrifices.
Different types of corÅna were used as military decorations honoring various acts of bravery. For instance, the corÅna mÅ«rÄ?lis, or âwalled crown,â was a gold crown fashioned in the shape of battlements and was awarded to a soldier who was the first to enter a besieged town or fortress. One especially high honor was the corÅna cÄ«vica (âcivic crownâ), bestowed on a citizen who saved a fellow citizenâs life. It was also known as corÅna querca, or âoak crown,â because it was made with oak leaves. This crown became a symbol for emperors and appeared on coins.
Outside of literal crowns worn on the head, the Latin corÅna could be used for various things that resemble crowns in their form, including cornices and the halo around the sun. These applications of corÅna informed the earliest uses of the word in English.
The oldest recorded sense of corona in English refers to the projecting, slab-like part of a classical cornice. Next up in Englishâs record, evidenced around the mid-1600s, is corona meaning âa ring of light, as around the sun or moonââlike a figurative crown atop the head of a celestial body. Today, astronomers specifically use corona for the outermost part of the sunâs atmosphere, which is visible during a total solar eclipse.
Dig deeper
As weâve seen, corona comes from the Latin word for âcrown.â So does the very word crown!
Much older than corona, crown is found in English around 1125â1175. Crown developed from the Middle English coroune, among other forms, which came from the Anglo-French coroune, in turn from the Latin corona.
Now, the Latin corÅna has its own fascinating past. It was borrowed from the ancient Greek korá¹nÄ, a word used for a kind of crow or seabird, as well as for anything curved or hooked, presumably due to the shape of the beak of such birds.
What does the corona in coronavirus mean?
Before 2020, the word corona likely brought to mind for many people Corona, a popular brand of beer made in Mexico. The logo for corona features a gold crownâcorona being the Spanish word for âcrown,â also from the Latin corÅna. The lager-style beer was first brewed in 1925.
Due to the 2020 pandemic, however, corona became widely used as a shortened form for coronavirus, especially COVID-19. Coronavirus refers to a family of viruses that cause respiratory infections. First recorded around 1965â70, the name coronavirus is based on the structure of these viruses.
OK, so far weâve had some Latin lessons, some history, even a dash of architecture and astronomyâa little pathology canât hurt.
A virus is an extremely tiny infectious agent made up of an RNA or DNA core, a protein coat, and, in some species, an envelope. Coronaviruses contain RNA and are spherical in form. They have an envelope from which project club-like spikes all over its surface. When they discovered the virus group in the 1960s, scientists originally thought the array of these spikes resembled the solar corona, and so named this family of viruses coronavirus.
Did you know ... ?
There are a number of other English words that ultimately come from or are related to the Latin corÅna, including coronal, coronary, and coronet. Learn more about their meanings and histories at our entries for the words.
Finally, corolla is a beautiful botanical termâand yes, line of carsâfor âthe petals of a flower.â It comes from the Latin corolla, âlittle garland,â a diminutive of corÅna. The term corollary is also derived from corolla.
How to use corona in a sentence
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