different between umbrine vs ombre
umbrine
English
Wikispecies
Etymology
(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)
Noun
umbrine (plural umbrines)
- Any of several food fishes of the genus Umbrina.
umbrine From the web:
ombre
English
Etymology 1
Borrowed from French hombre, from Spanish hombre, literally, a man, from Latin homo. Doublet of hombre. See human.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /??m.b?/, /??m.b?e?/
Noun
ombre (uncountable)
- A Spanish card game, usually played by three people. It involves forty cards, omitting the ranks of 8, 9 and 10.
- Belinda now, whom chirst of fame invites,
Burns to encounter two advent'rous Knights,
At Ombre singly to decide their doom
And swells her breast with conquests yet to com
- Belinda now, whom chirst of fame invites,
- 1728, Edward Young, The Love of Fame
- When ombre calls, his hand and heart are free, / And, joined to two, he fails not to make three.
Translations
Etymology 2
(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium. Particularly: “French ombre?”)
Noun
ombre (plural ombres)
- (archaic) A large Mediterranean food fish Umbrina cirrosa
Synonyms
- umbra, umbrine
Etymology 3
Borrowed from French ombre ("shade"). Doublet of umber.
Noun
ombre (plural ombres)
- (colors) A gradual blending of one color hue to another, usually moving tints and shades from light to dark.
Related terms
- ombré
- ombrée
Anagrams
- B-more, brome, omber
Aragonese
Etymology
From Latin homo, hominem.
Noun
ombre m (plural ombres)
- man
- a 17th-century Spanish card game (c. 1650-1660), usually played by three persons with a pack of 40 cards.
- the lone player in this game undertaking to win the pool against two defenders.
French
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /??b?/
- Homophones: hombre, hombres, ombres, ombrent
Etymology 1
From Old French ombre, onbre, from Latin umbra, probably from Old Latin *omra, possibly from a Proto-Indo-European *h?mr-u-, *h?mrup-.
Noun
ombre f (plural ombres)
- shade, shadow
- darkness
- ghost
Derived terms
Related terms
Verb
ombre
- first-person singular present indicative of ombrer
- third-person singular present indicative of ombrer
- first-person singular present subjunctive of ombrer
- third-person singular present subjunctive of ombrer
- second-person singular imperative of ombrer
Etymology 2
Latin umbra (“drumfish”), probably the same etymon as above.
Noun
ombre m (plural ombres)
- (Ichthyology) A fish of Osteichthyes of the freshwater family Salmonidae, of the genus Thymallus.
Synonyms
- corp
- thymalle
Anagrams
- brome
Further reading
- “ombre” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
Friulian
Etymology
From Latin umbra.
Noun
ombre f (plural ombris)
- shadow
- shade
Related terms
- ombrî
- ombrôs
Galician
Etymology
From Latin umbra.
Noun
ombre f (plural ombres)
- shadow
- shade
Related terms
- sombra
- sôma
Italian
Noun
ombre f
- plural of ombra
Ladino
Etymology
From Old Spanish, from Latin homo, hominem.
Noun
ombre m (Latin spelling, Hebrew spelling ???????)
- man
Norman
Etymology
From Old French onbre, from Latin umbra.
Noun
ombre f (plural ombres)
- shadow (poorly lit area)
Old French
Noun
ombre f (oblique plural ombres, nominative singular ombre, nominative plural ombres)
- Alternative form of onbre
Spanish
Noun
ombre m (plural ombres)
- Obsolete spelling of hombre
Venetian
Noun
ombre
- plural of ombra
ombre From the web:
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