capelo

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See also: ĉapelo and capeło

Galician

capelos

Etymology

From Old Galician and Old Galician-Portuguese capelo, from Vulgar Latin *cappellus (hat), from Late Latin cappa. Compare chapeu, which came through French.

Pronunciation

Noun

capelo m (plural capelos)

  1. (botany) navelwort, pennywort (Umbilicus rupestris)
    Synonyms: conchelo, couselo
  2. (archaic) helmet
    • 1290, Clarinda de Azevedo Maia (ed.), História do galego-português. Estado linguístico da Galiza e do Noroeste de Portugal do século XII ao século XVI (com referência á situação do galego moderno). Coimbra: I.N.I.C., page 138:
      mando a Ares d'Alcantara o meu perponto, o meu lorigon, a ma gorgeyra τ cen mr. da guerra en dineyros polo que deleſ oue τ o meu capelo do fferro
      I left Ares d'Alcántara my padded jerkin, my mail, my gorget, a hundred maravedis of war for what I had of them, and my iron helmet
    Synonyms: capacete, elmo
  3. hood

References


Portuguese

Etymology

Probably from Old Galician-Portuguese capelo, from Vulgar Latin *cappellus (hat)[1][2][3], Medieval Latin capellus, from Late Latin cappa, or less likely through Italian cappello[4] (although this probably applies in the sense of a cardinal's red hat). Doublet of chapéu, which came through French.

Pronunciation

 

  • Hyphenation: ca‧pe‧lo

Noun

capelo m (plural capelos)

  1. cowl (monk’s hood)
  2. red hat worn by cardinals, or a galero (hat worn by clergy)
  3. knit cap worn by nuns or widows
  4. dossel
  5. one with a doctorate
  6. a type of fish

See also

References

  1. ^ capelo”, in Dicionário infopédia da Língua Portuguesa (in Portuguese), Porto: Porto Editora, 20032024
  2. ^ https://www.lexico.pt/capelo/
  3. ^ capelo”, in Michaelis Dicionário Brasileiro da Língua Portuguesa (in Portuguese), São Paulo: Editora Melhoramentos, 20152024
  4. ^ capelo”, in iDicionário Aulete (in Portuguese), Rio de Janeiro: Lexikon Editora Digital, 20082024

Spanish

Etymology

Borrowed from Italian cappello, from Vulgar Latin *cappellus. Doublet of capillo, which was inherited, and of chapeo and chapó, from French.

Noun

capelo m (plural capelos)

  1. red hat worn by cardinals

Further reading