Venice
English
Etymology
From Middle English Venyse, from Old French Venise or Old Italian, from Medieval Latin Venetia, from Latin Venetī + -ia (suffix forming place names), a local tribe in antiquity whose own little-attested language is now known as Venetic. Initial scholarly agreement that they were Illyrian was based on arguments since refuted. They worshipped Belenus and were possibly Celtic or heavily influenced by Celtic culture, despite repeatedly supporting the Romans against the Gauls. Compare the identical ethnonym Venetī used for Celts of Armorica (ancient Britanny) from Gaulish Uenetoi (“friendly ones, kinsmen”), from Proto-Celtic *wenet, a modified form of *wenyā (“kindred”). Widely but mistakenly derived by the ancient Greeks and Romans from the Eneti of Pamphylia, supposed to have fled to the Adriatic and become the Veneti after supporting the losing side of the Trojan War. As American places, named after the Italian city. Doublet of Venetia and Venezia.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈvɛnɪs/
Audio (Southern England): (file) - Rhymes: -ɛnɪs
Proper noun
Venice (countable and uncountable, plural Venices)
- A port city and comune, the capital of the Metropolitan City of Venice and the region of Veneto, Italy; former capital of an independent republic.
- Alternative form: Venezia (endonym)
- Synonyms: Serenissima, lagoon city
- c. 1596–1598 (date written), William Shakespeare, “The Merchant of Venice”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies […] (First Folio), London: […] Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, →OCLC, [Act III, scene iii], page 176:
- An. The Duke cannot deny the courſe of law: / for the commoditie that ſtrangers haue / With vs in Venice, if it be denied, / Will much impeach the iuſtice of the State, / Since that the trade and profit of the citty / Conſiſteth of all Nations.
- 2010, Graham Holderness, Shakespeare and Venice, →ISBN, page 141:
- As I indicated at the outset, for us Shakespeare's Venetian plays lie between the early modern republic described in Chapter 2, and all the subsequent Venices of our experience, education and imagination, […]
- A metropolitan city of Veneto, established in 2015; in full, the Metropolitan City of Venice.
- Alternative form: Venezia (endonym)
- (historical) A former province of Veneto.
- Alternative form: Venezia (endonym)
- (historical) A former polity in Europe, a republic and colonial empire around the Adriatic and eastern Mediterranean from CE 697 to 1797 with its capital at Venice.
- Synonyms: Republic of Venice, Most Serene Republic of Venice, Serenissima
- A township in Illinois, United States.
- A township in Michigan, United States.
- A township in Ohio, United States.
- A neighborhood of Los Angeles, California, United States.
- Hyponyms: Venice Beach, Muscle Beach
Hyponyms
- (Italian city): Cannaregio, Castello, Dorsoduro, San Marco, San Polo, Santa Croce
Derived terms
Related terms
Descendants
- → Japanese: ベニス (Benisu), ヴェニス (Venisu)
- → Korean: 베니스 (Beniseu)
- → Mandarin: 威尼斯 (Wēinísī)
- → Cantonese: 威尼斯 (wai1 nei4 si1)
- → Welsh: Fenis
- → Malay: Venis
Translations
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Anagrams
Middle English
Proper noun
Venice
- alternative form of Venyse