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chemise "

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    • \ shə-ˈmēz \

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    [Noun]  | "che*mise" | \ shə-ˈmēz \


    1: a woman's one-piece undergarment

    2: a loose straight-hanging dress


    Origin: 13th century ;

     Borrowed from French, going back to Old French cheminse, chamisae "tunic-like garment worn directly against the skin," going back to Late Latin camīsia, perhaps borrowed from a continental Celtic word borrowed from West Germanic *hamiþja- (whence Old English hemeþe "undergarment, tunic, shirt," Old Frisian hemethe, hemede, hamed, Old Saxon hemithi, Old High German hemidi), derivative, with the dental suffix *-iþja-, of Germanic *hama- or *haman- "shape, human form, covering" (whence Old English hama [masculine weak noun] "covering, womb, afterbirth, slough of a snake," Old Norse hamr "skin, shape (assumed by a supernatural entity)," and in compounds Old Frisian līkhoma, lichama "body, corpse," Old Saxon gūthhamo "battle shirt," līkhamo "body, corpse," Old High German gundhamo, līhnamo), of uncertain origin;

      * Note : The word chemise occurs once in Middle English, presumably borrowed from Anglo-French, but as a designation for a woman's garment it does not occur after that until the eighteenth century, when it was reborrowed from French. Late Latin camīsia was taken directly into Old English as cemes "shirt, undergarment," continued in Middle English as kemes, kemse, but not surviving any later. The kind of garment designated by camīsia, a sort of close-fitting shirt worn by men, was apparently not familiar to the Romans, so Latin had no name for it; the tunica "tunic," usually at least knee-length and belted, was evidently not the same. The earliest attestation of camīsia, in a letter of {jerome|Jerome:b} (Epistolae 64.11), describes it as having "close-fitting sleeves" ("strictis manicis") descending to the legs ("… usque ad crura descendat"); camīsia was the vernacular name for such a garment, worn by soldiers ("… solent militares habere lineas, quas camisias vocant" - "soldiers customarily possess linen garments, which they call camisiae"). The etymology given above is often accepted, but it is not without obscurities. The reflection of Germanic initial as in camīsia is peculiar, as is the long i, attested as short in outcomes of the etymon only in easternmost Romance (Romanian, Dalmatian, dialects of northeast Italy). British Celtic languages have what appears to be an early loan from Old English hemeþe, though with a sibilant that is perhaps owed to the Latin word: Welsh hefys, hefis "woman's undergarment" (ca. 1400 heuis), Old Cornish heuis (glossing colobium "sleeveless tunic"), Old Breton hemis (in guest-hemisiou, glossing lāticlāvia "tunic with a broad purple stripe"). The Germanic etymon has been further compared with Sanskrit śāmulya- "garment," though given the lack of other evidence this connection is questionable.;

    [Noun]  | "chemise" 


    1: as in sundress, kimono;


    •  Antonyms : 

    • (N/A)





     [ "chemise" ]

    1: A very short piece of lingerie. Used under dresses and skirts.

      * e.g.,  ... I saw her silky chemise when her skirt flipped up. 

     [ "chemise" ]

    1: A loose, dress-like undergarment worn by women under dresses and skirts. Also called a slip.

      * e.g.,  ... Spring is here; gone are the layers and heavier dress fabrics of winter, replaced by light chemise dresses. 

     [ "Chemise" ]

    1: A beautiful person inside & out, so cool and calm.. your gonna fall in love & not mean to. She’s charming & every one who meets her loves her once you get attached there’s no letting go.

      * e.g.,  ... You need somebody to talk to? Here comes Chemise 

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