celemin
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Spanish celemín, from Andalusian Arabic, from Arabic ثُمُنِ (ṯumuni, “of one-eighth”). Doublet of tomin and azumbre.
Noun
celemin (plural celemins or celemines)
- (historical) A traditional Spanish unit of dry measure, equivalent to about 4.6 L.
- (historical) A traditional Spanish unit of land area, vaguely reckoned as the amount of land that could be sown with a celemin of seed.
- (historical) A traditional Spanish unit of land area, formalized as equivalent to about 537 m².
Synonyms
- almud (Spain)
Coordinate terms
- (unit of dry volume): cuartillo (¼ celemin), medio (½ celemin), cuartilla (3 celemins), hemina (5 celemins), cuarto (6 celemins), fanega (12 celemins), saco (24 celemins), carga (48 celemins), cahiz (144 celemins)
- (formal unit of area): cuartillo (¼ celemin), aranzada (8⅓ celemins), fanega (50 celemins), yugada (600 celemins), caballeria (720 celemins)
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.