աթոռ

Etymology
From.

Noun

 * 1) chair
 * 2)  throne

Etymology
The origin is. An overview of opinions follows.

Windischmann compared with 🇨🇬. The comparison was revived by Marr, who derived both from a “Japhetic” root in the framework of his discredited.

Müller derived from, , , , for the sense development comparing. This is rejected by de Lagarde and Hübschmann.

derived from 🇨🇬,. Ačaṙyan rejected the comparison because the older forms of the Turkic word contain an -l-: compare 🇨🇬.

Karst connected with 🇨🇬.

J̌ahukyan and Olsen mark the origin as unknown, with J̌ahukyan remarking that is a late acquisition absent from Proto-Armenian.

Perhaps from the name of, the capital of the Assyrian Empire: compare 🇨🇬, sometimes transcribed as Āṯōr, 🇨🇬, ultimately from 🇨🇬. The sense development could have been "capital, throne city, the Seat" → "throne, seat". For such a lexicalisation of city names in Mesopotamia, the most advanced civilisation neighbouring Proto-Armenians, compare,. In this case, a doublet of.

Noun

 * 1) chair, seat; bench; throne
 * 2) a seat used in evacuating the bowels or in urinating, stool
 * 3)  throne the third highest order of angel in Christian angelology, ranked above minions and below cherubim
 * 1) a seat used in evacuating the bowels or in urinating, stool
 * 2)  throne the third highest order of angel in Christian angelology, ranked above minions and below cherubim
 * 1) a seat used in evacuating the bowels or in urinating, stool
 * 2)  throne the third highest order of angel in Christian angelology, ranked above minions and below cherubim