CLOCCA

CLOCCA
CLOCCA
apud recentioris aevi Sctiptores, campana est, Gall. Cloche; a German. Clocken, vide ubi de Campanis. Item toga Equitum Melitensium, quam Consilium habituri sumunt. Idem Macer
ibid. Sed et eodem nomine vestis venit, in Concilio Londin. A. C. 1342. can. 2. de Cler. in Concilio Andegav. A. C. 1365. can. 20. alibique, quae videl. equitantium ac peregrinantium propria, campanae aut circuli, uti apud Graecos Cyclas, speciem referebat; in superiori parte strictior, in ima largior: Rotundellus can. 19. Concilii Andegavens. praefati, dicta, cuiusmodi veste Flandricae Domicellae etiamnum utuntur. Hodieque certe Anglis Cloake pallium est, vide Car. du Fresne in Glossario.

Hofmann J. Lexicon universale. 1698.

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  • cloche — 1. cloche [ klɔʃ ] n. f. • déb. XIIe; bas lat. clocca, mot celt. d Irlande 1 ♦ Instrument creux, évasé, en métal sonore (bronze), dont on tire des vibrations retentissantes et prolongées en en frappant les parois, de l intérieur avec un battant… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Clock — For other uses, see Clock (disambiguation). Timepiece redirects here. For the Kenny Rogers album, see Timepiece (album). Platform clock at King s Cross railway station, London …   Wikipedia

  • Bells — • Article covers origin, benediction, uses, archaeology and inscriptions, and points of law Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Bells     Bells      …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • Glocke — Läute; Schelle; Klingel * * * Glo|cke [ glɔkə], die; , n: 1. etwa kegelförmiger, hohler, nach unten offener, mit einem Klöppel versehener Klangkörper aus Metall: die Glocken läuten. Zus.: Kirchenglocke, Kuhglocke, Schiffsglocke. 2. (österr.)… …   Universal-Lexikon

  • cloche — (klo ch ) s. f. 1°   Instrument d airain, en forme de coupe renversée, produisant des sons retentissants à l aide d un battant suspendu dans l intérieur et mis en mouvement par le branle de la cloche, ou à l aide d un marteau placé à l extérieur… …   Dictionnaire de la Langue Française d'Émile Littré

  • clock — [14] The clock appears to have been so named because it told the hours by the chiming of a ‘bell’, medieval Latin clocca. The Latin word, which emerged in the 7th century and may have been of Irish origin, probably reached English via Middle… …   The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • Glocke — Glocke: Die im 6. Jh. aus Nordafrika nach Italien eingeführten Glocken fanden auch im übrigen Europa rasch Verbreitung. Besonders in Irland wurden kunstvolle Glocken für gottesdienstliche Zwecke hergestellt. Im Rahmen der Missionstätigkeit… …   Das Herkunftswörterbuch

  • Alarm clock — Clock Clock (kl[o^]k), n. [AS. clucge bell; akin to D. klok clock, bell, G. glocke, Dan. klokke, Sw. klocka, Icel. klukka bell, LL. clocca, cloca (whence F. cloche); al perh. of Celtic origin; cf. Ir. & Gael. clog bell, clock, W. cloch bell. Cf.… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Astronomical clock — Clock Clock (kl[o^]k), n. [AS. clucge bell; akin to D. klok clock, bell, G. glocke, Dan. klokke, Sw. klocka, Icel. klukka bell, LL. clocca, cloca (whence F. cloche); al perh. of Celtic origin; cf. Ir. & Gael. clog bell, clock, W. cloch bell. Cf.… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • atomic clocks — Clock Clock (kl[o^]k), n. [AS. clucge bell; akin to D. klok clock, bell, G. glocke, Dan. klokke, Sw. klocka, Icel. klukka bell, LL. clocca, cloca (whence F. cloche); al perh. of Celtic origin; cf. Ir. & Gael. clog bell, clock, W. cloch bell. Cf.… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

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