Attar of roses was once made in India, Persia, Syria, and the Ottoman Empire.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Attar is the first Saudi woman to compete in athletics during the Olympics.
From the charlotteobserver.com
Attar was born and raised in California and attends Pepperdine University.
From the nytimes.com
A richly nourishing natural mask with rose attar oil to revitalise skin.
From the nzherald.co.nz
Here they purchased wool and attar of roses and above all silk.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Attar is one of two women representing Saudi Arabia at the Games.
From the olympics.time.com
Attar visited the Turkish city of Hatay along the countries'border but did not visit the refugee camps, the report said.
From the huffingtonpost.com
Attar didn't say when the letter would be sent.
From the timesunion.com
Attar was born and raised in California, according to her profile on Pepperdine University's athletics website.
From the smh.com.au
More examples
Essential oil or perfume obtained from flowers
Attar is the god of the morning star in western Semitic mythology. In Canaanite legend he attempts to usurp the throne of the dead god Baal but proves inadequate. In semi-arid regions of western Asia he was sometimes worshipped as a rain god. His female counterpart is the Phoenician Astarte. ...
Attar (or qattar) is a type of sweet syrup used in the preparation of Middle Eastern desserts.
Attar is the English form of itr, the Arabic word for fragrance or perfume. A traditional attar is made from the distilled essence of floral or other fragrance materials in a base of sandalwood oil.
The fragrant oil extracted from the petals of flowers, esp. from roses
Extracted substance derived from flower distillation.