scamellum

scamellum

scamellum u. scamillum, ī, n. (Demin. von scamnum), das Bänkchen, scamell., nach Prisc. 3, 38: scamill., Apul. b. Prisc. 3, 38. Not. Tir. 101, 22. Vgl. scamillus.


http://www.zeno.org/Georges-1913. 1806–1895.

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  • Schemel — Hocker; Sitz; Stuhl; Sessel * * * Sche|mel [ ʃe:ml̩], der; s, : 1. meist niedriges Möbel zum Sitzen ohne Lehne, auf dem eine Person Platz hat: er hockte sich auf den Schemel. Syn.: ↑ Hocker, ↑ Sitz, ↑ …   Universal-Lexikon

  • Shamble — Sham ble, n. [OE. schamel a bench, stool, AS. scamel, sceamol, a bench, form, stool, fr. L. scamellum, dim. of scamnum a bench, stool.] 1. (Mining) One of a succession of niches or platforms, one above another, to hold ore which is thrown… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • shambles — [sham′bəlz] n. 〚ME schamel, bench, as for displaying meat for sale < OE scamol, bench or stool, akin to Ger schemel < early WGmc borrowing < L scamellum, dim. < scamnum, bench < IE base * skabh , * skambh , to prop up > Sans skámbhana , a… …   Universalium

  • shamble — shamble1 /sham beuhl/, n. 1. shambles, (used with a sing. or pl. v.) a. a slaughterhouse. b. any place of carnage. c. any scene of destruction: to turn cities into shambles. d. any scene, place, or thing in disorder: Her desk is a shambles. 2.… …   Universalium

  • shamble — [17] Shamble ‘slouch’ and the noun shambles [15] are probably related. The latter originally meant ‘meat market’. It arose out of the plural of the now obsolete shamble ‘meat stall, meat table’, which represented a semantic specialization of Old… …   The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • shambles — plural noun [treated as sing.] 1》 informal a chaotic state. 2》 archaic a butcher s slaughterhouse. Origin ME (in the sense meat market ): plural of earlier shamble stool, stall , of W. Gmc origin, from L. scamellum, dimin. of scamnum bench …   English new terms dictionary

  • shambles — sham•bles [[t]ˈʃæm bəlz[/t]] n. (used with a sing. or pl. v.) 1) a slaughterhouse 2) any place of carnage 3) any scene of destruction 4) a place or condition of great disorder • Etymology: bef. 900; OE sc(e) amel stool, table < LL scamellum, L …   From formal English to slang

  • Schemel — Schemel: Die kleine Bank heißt mhd. schemel, ahd. ‹fuoz̧›scamil, niederl. schemel, ähnl. aengl. scamol. Die westgerm. Wörter sind früh aus spätlat. scamillus, scamellum »Bänkchen« (zu lat. scamnum »Bank«) entlehnt worden. Älteste Bedeutung im Dt …   Das Herkunftswörterbuch

  • shambles — /ˈʃæmbəlz / (say shambuhlz) plural noun (often construed as singular) 1. → slaughterhouse. 2. any place of carnage. 3. any place or thing in confusion or disorder. {Middle English shamel, Old English sc(e)amel stool, trestle table, from Latin… …  

  • skamel- — *skamel , *skamil germ., Maskulinum: nhd. Schemel; ne. stool; Rekontruktionsbasis: ae., anfrk., as., ahd.; Interferenz: Lehnwort lat. scabellum; Etymologie: s …   Germanisches Wörterbuch

  • shambles — ► NOUN 1) informal a state of complete disorder. 2) archaic a butcher s slaughterhouse. ORIGIN originally in the sense «meat market»: plural of earlier shamble «stool, stall», from Latin scamellum little bench …   English terms dictionary

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