A Latin word meaning brother, or in medieval times, a dining hall in a monastery where monks ate together.
From Latin 'frater' meaning 'brother,' from Proto-Indo-European root *'bhruH-.' In monastic contexts, it came to denote the communal dining hall where the brotherhood ate together, emphasizing the familial bond.
Medieval monasteries had a special room called the 'frater' where all the monks ate in silence while someone read religious texts aloud—the room name literally meant 'brotherhood,' showing how eating together was sacred bonding.
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