casier
French
Etymology 2
From Old French chasier, casier (“wicker basket in which cheese was left to dry”), formed as a masculine derivative of chasiere, casiere, itself from an abbreviation of a syntagma involving Latin forma (“form”), cratis (“wickerwork”), cista (“trunk, chest, casket”), or sporta (“basket, hamper”) and Late Latin cāseāria, feminine of cāseārius (“of or pertaining to cheese”), from cāseus (“cheese”). Alternatively but less likely directly from cāseārius, although this may apply to the old sense of one who makes cheese.
Alternative forms
- chasier (obsolete)
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /kɑ.zje/
- Homophone: casiers
Noun
casier m (plural casiers)
Related terms
- chasière
Further reading
- “casier” in le Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
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