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zucchetto
[ zoo-ket-oh; Italian tsook-ket-taw ]
noun
, plural zuc·chet·tos, Italian zuc·chet·ti [tsook-, ket, -tee].
- a small, round skullcap worn by Roman Catholic ecclesiastics, a priest's being black, a bishop's violet, a cardinal's red, and the pope's white; calotte.
zucchetto
/ zuː-; suː-; tsuːˈkɛtəʊ /
noun
- RC Church a small round skullcap worn by certain ecclesiastics and varying in colour according to the rank of the wearer, the Pope wearing white, cardinals red, bishops violet, and others black
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Word History and Origins
Origin of zucchetto1
1850–55; < Italian, variant of zucchetta, diminutive of zucca gourd, head, perhaps < pre-Indo-European *tjukka gourd
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Word History and Origins
Origin of zucchetto1
C19: from Italian, from zucca a gourd, head, from Late Latin cucutia gourd, probably from Latin cucurbita
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Example Sentences
The zucchetto, or pileolus, is removed at the end of the last secret prayer, and resumed after the ablutions.
From Project Gutenberg
Some one asked whether it was lawful for any one, not a bishop, to wear a zucchetto during the celebration of Mass.
From Project Gutenberg
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