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Origin and history of ghoul

ghoul(n.)

1786, goul, in the English translation of William Beckford's Orientalist novel "Vathek" (which was written in French), from Arabic ghul, an evil spirit that robs graves and feeds on corpses, from ghala "he seized."

Entries linking to ghoul

variable star (Beta Persei) in the constellation Perseus, late 14c., literally "the Demon," from Arabic al-ghul "the demon" (see ghoul). It corresponds, in modern representations of the constellation, to the gorgon's head Perseus holds, but probably it was so called because it visibly varies in brightness every three days, which sets it apart from other bright stars.

The computer language (1959) is a contraction of algo(rithmic) l(anguage); see algorithm.

1840, from ghoul + -ish. Related: Ghoulishly; ghoulishness.

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    Trends of ghoul

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

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