nidor

Etymology
From.

Noun

 * 1) The smell of burning animals, especially of burning animal fat.
 * 2) * 1743, Thomas Stackhouse, A Compleat Body of Speculative and Practical Divinity, edition 3 (London), page 524:
 * The First-fruits were a common Oblation to their Deities; but the chief Part of their Worship consisted in sacrificiing Animals : And this they did out of a real Persuasion, that their Gods were pleased with their Blood, and were nourished with the Smoke, and Nidor of them; and therefore the more costly, they thought them the more acceptable, for which Reason, they stuck not sometimes to regale them with human Sacrifices.
 * 1)  Any smell.
 * 1)  Any smell.
 * 1)  Any smell.
 * 1)  Any smell.

Etymology
From, from. It has been speculated that the word is cognate with Homeric 🇨🇬 and Attic, but Beekes finds this phonetically unlikely. Likewise for and  through an earlier dual sense of smelling and scratching.

Noun

 * 1) the steam or smell from roasting, burning or boiling (especially animals)