maçon

See also: macon, Macon, and Mâcon

French

Etymology

From Middle French maçon (mason) from Old French maçon, masson, machun (brick-layer), from Late Latin maciō, machiō (carpenter, brick-layer) (attested 7th century by Isidore de Séville), of Germanic origin, from Frankish *makjo (builder, maker), derivative of *makōn (to build, make, work), from Proto-Germanic *makōną (to work, build, make), from Proto-Indo-European *mag- (to knead, mix, make), conflated with Frankish *mattijo (cutter), from Proto-Germanic *mattijô, *mattukaz (ploughshare, mattock), from Proto-Indo-European *mat- (hoe, mattock). Akin to Old High German steinmezzo (stone mason), mahhōn (to make, work). More at make, mattock.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ma.sɔ̃/
  • (file)

Noun

maçon m (plural maçons)

  1. mason, stonemason; builder
  2. (freemasonry) Mason, Freemason

Further reading


Middle French

Alternative forms

  • macon (older manuscripts)

Etymology

Old French maçon.

Noun

maçon m (plural maçons)

  1. mason; builder

Descendants


Old French

FWOTD – 23 August 2017

Alternative forms

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /maˈt͡sõn/

Noun

maçon m (oblique plural maçons, nominative singular maçons, nominative plural maçon)

  1. mason; builder
    • circa 1155, Wace, Le Roman de Brut:
      Maçons fist querre et carpenters
      Si fist refaire les mousters
      He searched for masons and carpenters
      in order to rebuild the minsters.

Descendants


Portuguese

Noun

maçon m (plural maçons)

  1. Alternative form of mação
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