orçuelo
Old Spanish
Etymology
From Latin hordeolus (“stye”), diminutive of hordeum (“barley”). According to Coromines and Pascual, first attested ca. 1400, in the Glossaries of El Escorial and Toledo.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /oɾˈt͡swelo/
Noun
orçuelo (m)
- stye
- ca. 1429, Alfonso Chirino, Menor daño de la medicina (Escorial, b.IV.34) 115r:[1]
- Para enel orçuelo que se faze enel ojo que es de fo[r]ma de grano de çeuada frotenlo a menudo con moscas cortadas las cabecas esto faga de dia & tengan ençima del de noche vn pañezuelo de buen diaquilon
- For the stye that grows in one's eye, in the shape of a barley, rub it often with flies after cutting their heads. Do this during the day, and at night have a piece of cloth of good diachylon.
- Para enel orçuelo que se faze enel ojo que es de fo[r]ma de grano de çeuada frotenlo a menudo con moscas cortadas las cabecas esto faga de dia & tengan ençima del de noche vn pañezuelo de buen diaquilon
Descendants
- Spanish: orzuelo, ozuelo (non-standard)
References
- as shown in the RAE's Diachronic Corpus of Spanish (CORDE), accessed 2021-02-27
- Joan Coromines, José A. Pascual (1985) “orzuelo”, in Diccionario crítico etimológico castellano e hispánico (in Spanish), volumes IV (Me–Re), Madrid: Gredos, →ISBN, page 317
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