halagar

Meaning

  1. (transitive) to make much of, to flatter, to entice
  2. (transitive) to praise, to make much of
  3. (transitive) to caress, to please, to gratify, to soothe, to appease, to cocker

Hyphenated as
ha‧la‧gar
Pronounced as (IPA)
/alaˈɡaɾ/
Etymology

In summary

Inherited from Old Spanish falagar. Further propositions are many: in 1884 the Royal Spanish Academy said from Arabic حَلَاوَة (ḥalāwa, “pleasing, agreeable thing”); in 1899 from Latin flagitāre (“to solicit”); in 1956 from Arabic خَلَقَ (ḵalaqa, “to make, forge, lie, polish, perfume”), which Coromines and Pascual support while mentioning a related خَالَقَ (ḵālaqa, “to treat someone kindly”); in 2001 from Andalusian Arabic هَالَاق (ẖaláq, “thief pigeon”). Other possibilities: from Basque palagau (“to flatter, calm, give”), from Hebrew הלל (the -gar ending from Latin -icare as with cabalgar, comulgar, amargar; the last -l of the theme omitted for repetition, see idolatry). See Galician afagar, Asturian afalagar, Basque balakatu (“to flatter”), Basque palagukeria (“flattery”), Basque palagu (“flattery, caress”), Basque palaguka (“caressing”, adv.), Aragonese falaguera (“impertinent extravagant desire, passion, swelter”), Catalan afalagar (“to stroke, flatter”), Catalan falaguera f sg (“flattering, satisfying, contenting, appeasing, placating; light, quick: charm, charisma, grace, pull”, adj., hence n.).

Notes

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