dammusu
Sicilian
Alternative forms
- tammusu (desonorized)
Etymology
From Arabic دَمُّوس (dammūs), variant of دَيْمَاس (daymās). Ultimately from Ancient Greek δημόσιον (dēmósion, “public building; treasury; public prison; public bath”), the neuter of δημόσιος (dēmósios, “public”) Compare furthermore Doric Greek δᾱμόσῐος (dāmósios).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /damˈmu.su/ (Standard)
- Hyphenation: dam‧mù‧su
Noun
dammusu m (plural dammusi or dammusa)
- underground vault, obtained from the excavation of limestone and finished in masonry, intended for housing, whose internal temperature remains constant between summers and winters
- a limestone habitation typical of the Hyblaean Mountains. Cfr. dieri
- a small, stone habitation typical of Pantelleria
Derived terms
- dammusaru
Descendants
- → Italian: dammuso
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.