meschino

Italian

Etymology

From Arabic مِسْكِين (miskīn) from Aramaic מסכןא (meskēnā), derived from Akkadian 𒈦𒆕 (muškēnu, villein, indigent; class of people dependent or reliant on others, unable to provide supplies on their own; commoner). The Akkadian term is first recorded in early dynastic Sumer. Compare French mesquin

Adjective

meschino (feminine singular meschina, masculine plural meschini, feminine plural meschine)

  1. wretched
  2. mean, sleazy
  3. narrow-minded
  4. petty
  5. poor (used to express commiseration in Liguria)

Noun

meschino m (plural meschini)

  1. wretch
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.