chamois

/ˈʃæmwɑː/

UK: /ˈʃæmi/

chamois

English Noun Top 48,537
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Definition

A short-horned goat antelope native to mountainous terrain in southern Europe; Rupicapra rupicapra.

Etymology

Borrowed from Middle French chamois, from Late Latin camox, from Gaulish camox (5th c. AD, Polemius Silvius), probably from an extinct Alpine language (Raetic, Ancient Ligurian), possibly Proto-Indo-European *kem- (“without horns”). Compare also Old High German gamiza (“chamois”) (whence modern German Gämse).

Example Sentences

  • "When my father returned from Milan, he found playing with me in the hall of our villa a child fairer than pictured cherub – a creature who seemed to shed radiance from her looks and whose form and motions were lighter than the chamois of the hills."
  • "[H]e seldom donned his armour, substituted costly damask and silk for his war-worn shamoy doublet, and affected at his advanced time of life more gaiety of attire than his contemporaries remembered as distinguishing his early youth."
  • "I took them, breathed on them, polished them with a chamois and hung them on the chandelier."
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