ermine

English

ermine, Mustela erminea

Etymology

From Middle English ermine, ermin, ermyn, from Old French ermin, ermine, hermine.

There are two main theories for the origin of Old French ermine. Germanic origin is suggested via Old Dutch *harmino (stoat skin), from *harmo (stoat, weasel) (compare Dutch dialectal herm), from Proto-Germanic *harmǭ, *harmô (compare Old English hearma, Old High German harmo (harmin (adjective), obsolete German Harm), from Proto-Indo-European *ḱormō (compare Romansch carmun, obsolete Lithuanian šarmuõ). Romance sources identify the animal with the corresponding word for Armenian, possibly from Medieval Latin mūs Armenius (Armenian mouse) or a posterior compound.

Pronunciation

Noun

ermine (countable and uncountable, plural ermines or ermine)

  1. A weasel, Mustela erminea, found in northern latitudes; its dark brown fur turns white in winter (apart from the black tip of the tail).
  2. The white fur of this animal, traditionally seen as a symbol of purity and used for judges' robes.
  3. (by extension, figuratively) The office of a judge.
  4. (heraldry) A white field with black spots.

Synonyms

Translations

Verb

ermine (third-person singular simple present ermines, present participle ermining, simple past and past participle ermined)

  1. To clothe with ermine

Anagrams


Middle English

Noun

ermine

  1. Alternative form of ermyn

Old French

Alternative forms

Noun

ermine f (oblique plural ermines, nominative singular ermine, nominative plural ermines)

  1. ermine (fabric)
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