View Message

This is a reply within a larger thread: view the whole thread

[Facts] Re: Etymology of MARIPOSA
The first apparition of the word "mariposa" is in Libro del cavallero et del escudero by Infante Don Juan Manuel (1326).The most accepted etymology comes from Joan Coromines, in his Diccionario crítico etimológico castellano e hispánico: "mariposa" comes from the expression "Mari, posa(te)" (Mary, alight!), present in children's songs and games. In Sardinian and dialectal French, there are several similar words ("maria vola") to say "butterfly".Vicente García de Diego (just as Sebastián de Covarrubias in Tesoro de la lengua castellana o española, 1611) thinks that "mariposa" comes from the Latin "male pausat" (bad alighted); and for the Sardinian form, he thinks that it comes from the Latin "mane et pausat".RAE (Real Academia Española de la Lengua), in its dictionary (DRAE), offers Coromines's theory.The use of personal names for animals is not unusual in Romance languages: mariquita (ladybird in Spanish) and marieta (ladybird in Catalan) come from nicknames of Maria, guilla (fox in Catalan) comes from a nickname of Wilhelmina, renard (fox in French) comes from Reginhard, etc., etc.
Lumia
http://onomastica.mailcatala.com
vote up1vote down

Replies

Thank you so much, Lumia! This is highly interesting
vote up1vote down