Laurel
来自Big Physics
Middle English lorer, from Old French lorier, from Provençal laurier, from earlier laur, from Latin laurus .
wiktionary
From Middle English lorrer, Anglo-Norman lorer, from Old French lorier, from lor, from Latin laurus(“laurel”).
etymonline
laurel (n.)
mid-14c. variant of lorrer (c. 1300), from Old French laurier, lorier "bay tree, laurel tree" (12c.), from Latin laurus "laurel tree," which is probably related to Greek daphne "laurel" (for change of d- to l- see lachrymose), which is probably from a pre-IE Mediterranean language.
The second -r- changed to -l- in late Middle English by dissimilation. An emblem of victory or of distinction, hence the phrase to rest (originally repose) on one's laurels, first attested 1831. Related: Laurine (adj.).