قارورة

Etymology
It could be believed from the root from the idea of the glass “standing still” or “chilling” after being shaped. However, apart from the circumstance that the material of a bottle, in general, in the ancient Near East, relatively rarely was glass as opposed to pottery or animal hide, this measure does not follow regular derivation rules of the Arabic language, in its state during Antiquity, and points instead to a loan from an unattested Aramaic word, possibly paralleling : for this observation take into consideration the otherwise unrecorded Nabataean gərōrā noted by al-Ḵwarizmī for the scorpion-name,  (quoted in the linked place) and the particular meanings of “drawing” and “flowing away” applied to liquids documented for the Judeo-Aramaic base verb  akin to the Arabic.

The 🇨🇬 pot-name, , although primarily used to boil liquids, is probably too remote in form.

Alternative forms, in so far as not, are contaminated from the source of in any case, which has the form  in many dialects, and long already fulfils the function of a word for a “glass vessel”; though influence from the source of  also be imaginable.

Noun

 * 1) flask, vial; bottle

Etymology
From.

Noun

 * 1) bottle mostly for plastic bottles