coquille
See also: Coquille
English
Etymology
Borrowed from French coquille. See also cockle.
Noun
coquille (plural coquilles)
- A meal, especially a seafood dish, served in an actual scallop shell or a dish (container) shaped like a shell.
- A scallop shell or a dish shaped like one, especially when used to serve the aforementioned food.
- A form of ruching used as a dress trimming or for neckwear, named from the manner in which it is gathered or fulled.
French
Etymology
From a combination of Vulgar Latin *conchilia (from Latin conchylium) with coccum.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /kɔ.kij/
Audio: (file)
Noun
coquille f (plural coquilles)
- shell
- (shell-shaped) dish; scallop
- typo, misprint
- Synonyms: bourdon, faute de frappe, mastic
- (sports) jockstrap, athletic protector; groin guard, box, cup (protection for the male genitals)
- (medicine) vacuum mattress (for spinal immobilization)
- (medicine) egg crate mattress (for prevention of bedsores)
Related terms
- coquillage
- coquillard
- coquille Saint-Jacques
- coquille vide
- coquillère
- coquillier
- rencoquiller
- sortir de sa coquille
Descendants
Further reading
- “coquille”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
Old French
Etymology
From Latin conchylium, from Ancient Greek κογχύλιον (konkhúlion).
Noun
coquille oblique singular, f (oblique plural coquilles, nominative singular coquille, nominative plural coquilles)
- shell (hard protective outer layer of some animals)