athame

English

Etymology

From the non-word arthame from a French manuscript. Arthame is either from a misreading of handwritten Italian arctrave, which is a variant of architrave (main beam), or from corruptions of the the Medieval Latin word artavus (quill-sharpening knife). Artavus was also mistranslated into the non-word artauo in an Italian manuscript. The arthame was conflated with the cortel nero ("black knife") by the author Grillot de Givry in 1931, and that conflation was passed on to Gerald Gardner (the creator of Wicca).

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /ɑːˈθɑː.meɪ/, /əˈθɑː.meɪ/
  • (US) IPA(key): /ɑˈθɑ.meɪ/, /əˈθɑ.meɪ/, /ˈæ.θəˌmeɪ/

Noun

athame (plural athames)

  1. A ceremonial pointed knife or dagger that is used in Wicca, traditionally having a black handle with magical symbols on it. [from 20th c.]

Anagrams

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