different between replum vs peplum
replum
English
Etymology
Latin replum (“door frame”)
Noun
replum (plural replums or repla)
- (botany) The framework of some pods, such as the cress, which remains after the valves drop off.
- (Can we find and add a quotation of Gray to this entry?)
Anagrams
- Lumper, Plumer, Rumple, lumper, rumple
Latin
Noun
replum n (genitive repl?); second declension
- bolt
- frame
Declension
Second-declension noun (neuter).
Descendants
- Catalan: reble
- Galician: rebo
References
- replum in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
- replum in Charles du Fresne du Cange’s Glossarium Mediæ et Infimæ Latinitatis (augmented edition, 1883–1887)
- replum in Gaffiot, Félix (1934) Dictionnaire illustré Latin-Français, Hachette
replum From the web:
- replum meaning
- what does replumb mean
- plump skin
- what is replumb mean
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peplum
English
Noun
peplum (plural peplums or pepla)
- (historical) A peplos, an Ancient Greek garment formed of a tubular piece of cloth folded back upon itself halfway down so that the top of the tube is worn around the waist, and the bottom covers the legs down to the ankles; the open top is then worn over the shoulders, and draped, in folds, down to the waist. Compare the Roman palla.
- A veil.
Quotations
- 1837: Ralph Cudworth, D. D., The True Intellectual System of the Universe (First American Edition, with references and an account of the author by Thomas Birch, M. A. F. R. S.)
- And this was Neith, or Athena, that God thus described, "I am all that was, is, and shall be, and my peplum or veil, no mortal could ever uncover." […] Peplum is properly a womanish pall or veil, embroidered all over and consecrated to Minerva.
- 1838: The North American Review, volume XLVII
- The outer garment was called the peplum, and was used more for occasions of ceremony than for ordinary convenience, as it was very long and ample, and, from the manner of putting it on, must have been inconvenient to the wearer. It was sometimes wound double round the body, […]
- 1904: G. Woolliscroft Rhead, The Treatment of Drapery in Art
- Over this they adopted the Greek peplum, under the name of palla. This garment, however, was exclusively confined to the gentler sex, and was never worn, as was the peplum among the Greeks, by men.
Noun
peplum (plural peplums or pepla)
- (uncountable) A genre of Italian films based on historical or biblical epics.
- (countable) An individual film in this genre.
- 2006, Pierluigi on Cinema
- […] there were hastily produced B movies, such as the peplums, the spaghetti westerns, the detective stories, the horrors.
- 2013, Bryan Senn, The Most Dangerous Cinema: People Hunting People on Film
- While it does offer a lighter tone than most peplums, and spotlights a hero who relies more on his wits than his biceps […]
- 2006, Pierluigi on Cinema
Synonyms
- (film genre): sword-and-sandal
See also
- Wikipedia article on the palla
- peplos
- palla
- exomis
- himation
- chlamys
- chiton
Spanish
Noun
peplum m (plural peplums)
- peplum
peplum From the web:
- peplum meaning
- what is peplum top
- what is peplum dress
- what is peplum fabric
- what is peplum stay
- what is peplum style
- what makes peplum stand
- what is peplum jacket
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