Talk:Camlet

Latest comment: 5 years ago by Wool Bridge in topic From Arabic Khaml meaning wool pile

From Arabic Khaml meaning wool pile edit

Appears in British Latin texts from at least 1235. The OED adds: 'at the earliest known date the word was associated (by Europeans) with camel, as if stuff made of camel's hair; but there is reason to think it was originally the Arabic khamlat, from khaml; Marco Polo (ed. Yule) I. 248 (Skeat). Khaml, khamlat, is explained by Lane as "the nap or pile or villous substance on the surface of cloth"; khamlat, by Johnson, as "camelot, silk and camel's hair, also, all silk or velvet, especially pily and plushy"'. ['camlet, n.', OED, 2nd ed. (1989)] On the borrowing into the Welsh, see Parry-Williams (1923)a, p.79.

From Arabic خمل، خملة hence مخمل

--Wool Bridge (talk) 11:52, 30 May 2018 (UTC)Reply