camisia

English

Etymology

Latin camisia

Noun

camisia (plural camisias or camisiae)

  1. (historical) An ancient kind of shirt or nightgown.
    • 2003, Tom Tierney, Historic Costume: From Ancient Times to the Renaissance, page 58:
      The father and son depicted here wear short linen camisias. The boy's camisia was probably his “dress-up” wear; the vertical stripe appears on matching stockings. The father's light-colored camisia is worn for work, doubling as an undergarment when he dresses up in an over-tunica.

Latin

Etymology

Borrowed from Proto-West Germanic *hamiþi (shirt), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *ḱem- (cover, clothes).

Noun

camisia f (genitive camisiae); first declension

  1. shirt
  2. nightgown
  3. alb

Declension

First-declension noun.

Case Singular Plural
Nominative camisia camisiae
Genitive camisiae camisiārum
Dative camisiae camisiīs
Accusative camisiam camisiās
Ablative camisiā camisiīs
Vocative camisia camisiae

Descendants

  • Eastern Romance
  • Franco-Provençal: chemise
  • Gallo-Italic
  • Italo-Dalmatian
  • Old French: chemise, cemise, chemes, chamisae
    • Gallo: chminzz
    • French: chemise
      • Antillean Creole: chimiz
      • Guianese Creole: chimiz
      • Karipúna Creole French: ximiz
      • Louisiana Creole: chimiz, chimij, chmiz, chimiy, chmij
      • Seychellois Creole: simiz, cemiz
      • English: chemise
      • Ladino: shemiz
      • Neapolitan: scemisse
      • Scots: chemeis
      • Vietnamese: sơ-mi
      • Yemeni Arabic: شميز
      (see there for further descendants)
    • Norman: queminse (continental Normandy), qu'minse, ch'minse (Guernsey), c'mînse (Jersey)
    • Walloon: tchimijhe
    • Middle English: chemise
  • Old Occitan:
  • Rhaeto-Romance
    • Friulian: cjamese
    • Ladin: ciameija
    • Romansch: chamischa
  • Sabir: camicia
  • Sardinian: camigia, camisa
  • Venetian: camixa
  • West Iberian
  • Albanian: këmishë
  • Arabic: قَمِيص (qamīṣ) (see there for further descendants)
  • Coptic: ⲕⲁⲙⲓⲥ (kamis)
  • Old Czech: komžě
  • Proto-West Germanic: *kamisi (see there for further descendants)
  • Byzantine Greek: καμίσιον (kamísion)
    • Classical Syriac: ܩܡܝܨܬܐ (qamīṣtāʾ) (see there for further descendants)
  • Old Irish: caimse

References

  • camisia”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
  • camisia in Gaffiot, Félix (1934) Dictionnaire illustré latin-français, Hachette.
  • camisia”, in Harry Thurston Peck, editor (1898), Harper's Dictionary of Classical Antiquities, New York: Harper & Brothers
  • camisia”, in William Smith et al., editor (1890), A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities, London: William Wayte. G. E. Marindin
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