different between manciple vs maniple
manciple
English
Noun
manciple (plural manciples)
- A person in charge of purchasing and storing food and other provisions in a monastery, college, or court of law.
References
- manciple at OneLook Dictionary Search
manciple From the web:
- what manciple wear
- manciple what do they do
- what does municipal mean
- what does manciple wear
- what does manciple
- manciple meaning
- what is a manciple in medieval times
- what is a manciple in the canterbury tales
maniple
English
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?mæn?p(?)l/
- (General American) IPA(key): /?mæn?p?l/
- Hyphenation: man?i?ple
Etymology 1
From Late Middle English maniple, manyple (“scarf worn as vestment, maniple”), borrowed from Middle French, Old French maniple, manipule (“handful; troop of soldiers; scarf worn as vestment”) (modern French manipule), from Latin manipulus (“bundle, handful; troop of soldiers”), from manus (“hand”) (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *(s)meh?- (“to beckon, signal”)) + the weakened root of ple? (“to fill; to fulfil”) (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *pleh?- (“to fill”)). The English word is cognate with Italian manipulo (“scarf worn as vestment”) (obsolete), manipolo (“handful; troop of soldiers; scarf worn as vestment”).
Sense 2 (“part of a priest’s vestments”) is probably from the fact that the item was originally carried in the hand. It may originate from a handkerchief or napkin worn by Roman consuls as an indication of rank.
Noun
maniple (plural maniples)
- (Ancient Rome, military) A division of the Roman army numbering 120 (or sometimes 60) soldiers exclusive of officers; (generally, obsolete) any small body of soldiers.
- Meronyms: century, cohort, legion
- (Christianity, chiefly historical) In Western Christianity, an ornamental band or scarf worn upon the left arm as a part of the vestments of a priest in the Roman Catholic Church, and sometimes the Church of England.
- Synonym: (one sense) fanon
- (obsolete, informal) A hand; a fist.
Alternative forms
- manyple [Late Middle English–16th c.]
- mainipul, manypule [16th c.]
- manaple, manipul [17th c.]
- manipule [17th–18th c.]
- manuple [17th and 19th c.]
- manipil (Scotland) [before 18th c.]
Derived terms
- maniple of the curates
Related terms
- manipular
- manipulary (obsolete, rare)
Translations
See also
- (part of a priest's vestments): epimanikion
Etymology 2
Probably from Late Latin manipulus (“bundle, handful; drachm”) (see further at etymology 1), modelled on Ancient Greek ?????? (drágma, “bundle, handful; sheaf”) which was confused with ?????? (drakhm?, “drachm”).
Noun
maniple (plural maniples)
- (obsolete) A handful.
References
Further reading
- maniple (military unit) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- maniple (vestment) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Anagrams
- impanel, palmine
maniple From the web:
- what maniple means
- what does manipulate mean
- what does maniple
- what does maniple mean in french
- what is a maniple vestment
you may also like
- manciple vs maniple
- maniple vs fanon
- maniple vs legionary
- maniple vs century
- maniple vs cassock
- maniple vs legion
- maniple vs manus
- manciple vs mancipee
- manciple vs obsonator
- college vs manciple
- monastery vs manciple
- provision vs manciple
- food vs manciple
- manciple vs caterer
- manciple vs manus
- rochet vs cassock
- surplice vs cassock
- soutane vs cassock
- bassock vs cassock
- cassock vs hassock