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Etymology Dictionary

Origin of the word CARCASE, CARCASS.
Etymology of the word CARCASE, CARCASS.

From An Etymology Dictionary of the English Language, by Walter W. Skeat, 1893.

 

CARCASE, CARCASS,  a dead body.  (F.,—Ital.—Pers.)   M.E. carcays, carkeys.   Spelt carcays in Hampole, Pricke of Conscience, 873.   'Carkeys, corpus, cadaver;' Prompt. Parv. p. 62.—O.F. carquasse, in Cotgrave, who explains it by 'a carkasse, or dead corps.'   Mod. F. carcasse, introduced from Ital. in the 16th cent. (Brachet).—Ital. carcassa, a kind of bomb, a shell (a carcase being a shell); closely related to Ital. carcasso, a quiver, hull, hulk, whence F. carquois, a quiver.   Corrupted from Low Lat. tarcasius, a quiver.—Pers. tarkash, a quiver; Palmer's Pers. Dict. col. 133.

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Etymology Dictionary Index
A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, J, K, L, M, N, O, P, Q, R, S, T, U, V, W, X, Y, Z

Key
Arab.=Arabic.
A.S.=Anglo Saxon.
Bavar.=Bavarian
Bohem.=Bohemian.
C.=Celtic, used as a general term for Irish, Gaelic, Welsh, Breton, Cornish, &c.
Corn.=Cornish.
Dan.=Danish.
Du.=Dutch
E.=English.
E.E.=Early English.
Europ.=European.
F.=French.
G.=German.
Gk.=Greek.
Goth.=Gothic.
Icel.=Icelandic.
Ital.=Italian.
L. or Lat.=Latin.
Lith. & Lithuan.=Lithuanian.
M.E.=Middle English.
M.F.=Middle French
M.H.G.=Middle High German.
Norw.=Norwegian.
O.F.=Old French.
O.H.G.=Old High German.
Pers.=Persian.
Port.=Portuguese.
Scand.=Scandinavian, used as a general term for Icelandic, Swedish, Danish, &c.
Sc.=Scottish.
Skt.=Sanskrit.
Span.=Spanish.
Swed.=Sweish.
Teut.=Teutonic
Turk.=Turkish.
W.=Welsh.

  

 

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