"solid part of a battlement," between and separating two crenelles or embrasures, 1704, from French merlon (17c.), from Italian merlone, augmentative of merlo "battlement," perhaps [OED] a contraction of mergola, diminutive of Latin mergae "two-pronged pitchfork."
meritorious
merkin
merle
merlin
Merlin
merlon
mermaid
merman
mero-
Merovingian
merrily