almude

English

Etymology

From Portuguese almude, from Andalusian Arabic المُدّ (al-mudd), from Arabic مُدّ (mudd), probably via Aramaic 𐡬𐡣𐡩𐡠 (mdyʾ) and מוֹדְיָא (moḏyā) or Classical Syriac ܡܘܿܕܝܳܐ (moḏyā) from Akkadian 𒉘𒈨𒌍 (/⁠maddattu/middattu⁠/, kind of vessel, unit of volume). Doublet of almud. Cognate with Ancient Greek μόδιος (módios) and Latin modius.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ælˈmuːd(ə)/

Noun

almude (plural almudes)

  1. (historical, measure) A traditional Portuguese unit of liquid volume, equal to 1426 liters.
  2. (historical, measure) Alternative form of almud, similar units of liquid volume in Spain and Turkey.

Coordinate terms

Translations

References

Anagrams

Portuguese

Etymology

From Andalusian Arabic المُدّ (al-mudd), from Arabic مُدّ (mudd), probably via Aramaic 𐡬𐡣𐡩𐡠 (mdyʾ) and מוֹדְיָא (moḏyā) or Classical Syriac ܡܘܿܕܝܳܐ (moḏyā) from Akkadian 𒉘𒈨𒌍 (/⁠maddattu/middattu⁠/, kind of vessel, unit of volume). Cognate with Ancient Greek μόδιος (módios), Latin modius, and Spanish almud.

Pronunciation

 
  • (Brazil) IPA(key): /awˈmu.d͡ʒi/ [aʊ̯ˈmu.d͡ʒi]
    • (Southern Brazil) IPA(key): /awˈmu.de/ [aʊ̯ˈmu.de]
  • (Portugal) IPA(key): /alˈmu.dɨ/ [aɫˈmu.ðɨ]

  • Hyphenation: al‧mu‧de

Noun

almude m (plural almudes)

  1. (historical, measure) almude, a traditional unit of liquid volume equal to 14–26 liters depending on the area of Portugal

Coordinate terms

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