braccio
See also: bracciò
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Italian braccio. Doublet of brachium.
Noun
braccio (plural braccia)
Anagrams
Italian
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈbrat.t͡ʃo/
Audio: (file) Audio (un braccio): (file) - Rhymes: -attʃo
- Hyphenation: bràc‧cio
Etymology 1
Inherited from Latin brachium, bracchium, from Ancient Greek βραχίων (brakhíōn).
Alternative forms
Noun
braccio m (plural (in most meanings) braccia f or (in the figurative meanings "branch (of a railway/railroad or river), wing (of a building), arm (of a cross, crane, of scales), strait, isthmus") bracci m, diminutive braccìno or braccétto, augmentative braccióne, diminutive-augmentative bracciòtto (“chubby little arm”))
- (anatomy) arm
- Synonym: membro
- (anatomy) upper arm
- Coordinate term: avambraccio (“forearm”)
- (unit of measure, nautical) fathom
- (figurative) work, effort
- (figurative) power, faculty, authority
- (geography) narrow stretch of land or sea, joining larger bodies
- braccio di mare ― strait (literally, “narrow stretch of sea”)
- braccio di terra ― isthmus (literally, “narrow stretch of land”)
- (mechanics) arm (of a crane, of a cross, of scales, of a candelabrum, etc.)
- branch (of a river or railway/railroad)
- wing (of a building)
Usage notes
- In senses 1 through 4, the plural form used is braccia, derived from Latin bracchia, the ancient neuter plural of bracchium. In the remaining senses the plural is derived regularly from the Italian masculine plural ending -i and is thus bracci.
Derived terms
Related terms
- avambraccio
- braccetto
- bracciatura
- lira da braccio
Etymology 2
Verb
braccio
- first-person singular present indicative of bracciare