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Origin and history of intramural
intramural(adj.)
1846, "within the walls, being within the walls or boundaries" (of a city, building, etc.), from
intra- "within" + Latin
muralis "pertaining to a wall," from
murus "wall" (see
mural). Equivalent to Late Latin
intramuranus. Originally in English in reference to burials of the dead; in reference to college activities from 1871 (first at Columbia).
also from 1846
Entries linking to intramural
mural(n.)
painting on a wall, by 1915, short for
mural painting "a painting executed upon the wall of a building" (1850), from
mural (adj.) "pertaining to a wall or walls" (mid-15c.), from Latin
muralis "of a wall," from
murus "wall" (Old Latin
moiros, moerus), from PIE
*mei- (3) "to fix; to build fences or fortifications" (source also of Old English
mære "boundary, border, landmark;" Old Norse
-mæri "boundary, border-land;" Latin
munire "to fortify, protect").
parietal(adj.)
early 15c., "pertaining to the walls of a cavity in the body," from Late Latin
parietalis "of walls," from Latin
paries (genitive
parietis) "wall" (of a building), a word of unknown origin. In U.S. also "pertaining to the residents and rules of a college or university" (1837; compare
intramural). Combining form is
parieto-.
intra-
word-forming element meaning "within, inside, on the inside," from Latin preposition
intra "on the inside, within, in, into;" of time, "during, in the course of," related to
inter "between," from PIE
*en-t(e)ro-, from root
*en "in." Commonly opposed to
extra-, and compare
inter-. The use of
intra as a prefix was rare in classical Latin.