ⲕⲗⲁϥⲧ
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Coptic
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Possibly from Demotic ḳrf (“unknown objects made of tissue”). Also could be borrowed from Ancient Greek καλυπτός (kaluptós, “covered”), or from Semitic, as Classical Syriac ܟܲܠܵܘܵܐ (kalāwā), ܟܲܠܘܵܐ (kalwā, “tiara”) and Akkadian 𒆪𒇻𒇻 (/kulūlu/, “a kind of turban or headband”) have a similar meaning, however judging by Latin calautica already present in Demotic.
Noun
[edit]ⲕⲗⲁϥⲧ • (klaft) f (plural ⲕⲗⲁϥⲧ (klaft))
- (Bohairic) hood, cowl
- (Bohairic) a kind of headdress consisting of a small cap environed by a gigantic turban, a bonnet, popular with the Ayyubids and Mamluks
Descendants
[edit]- → Arabic: كَلَّوْتَة (kallawta), كَلَّفْتَة (kallafta), كَلَّفْتَاة (kallaftāh), كَلَّفَة (kallafa)
References
[edit]- Crum, Walter E. (1939) A Coptic Dictionary[1], Oxford: Clarendon Press, →ISBN
- Vycichl, Werner (1983) Dictionnaire Étymologique de la Langue Copte, Leuven: Peeters, →ISBN
Categories:
- Coptic terms derived from Demotic
- Coptic terms borrowed from Ancient Greek
- Coptic terms derived from Ancient Greek
- Coptic terms borrowed from Semitic languages
- Coptic terms derived from Semitic languages
- Coptic terms inherited from Demotic
- Coptic lemmas
- Coptic nouns
- Coptic countable nouns
- Coptic feminine nouns
- Bohairic Coptic
- cop:Headwear