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Origin and history of hiatal

hiatal(adj.)

1906, from stem of hiatus + -al (1).

Entries linking to hiatal

1560s, "a break or opening" in a material object, especially in anatomy, from Latin hiatus "opening, aperture, rupture, gap," from past-participle stem of hiare "to gape, stand open" (from PIE root *ghieh- "to yawn, gape, be wide open").

The sense of "gap or interruption in events, etc.;" "space from which something requisite to completeness is absent" [Century Dictionary] is recorded from 1610s.

suffix forming adjectives from nouns or other adjectives, "of, like, related to, pertaining to," Middle English -al, -el, from French or directly from Latin -alis (see -al (2)).

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    Trends of hiatal

    adapted from books.google.com/ngrams/ with a 7-year moving average; ngrams are probably unreliable.

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