omertà
See also: omerta
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
Borrowed from Italian omertà, Southern dialectal variant of umiltà (“humility”), from Latin humilitās, from humilis (“humble”), from humus (“ground, soil”). Doublet of humility.
Noun
omertà (countable and uncountable, plural omertàs)
- (crime) A code of silence amongst members of a criminal organization (especially the Mafia) that forbids divulging insider secrets to law enforcement, often also followed outside of the organization in fear of retaliation; extensively, any code of silence.
- 2005 March 4, Boston Globe:
- Patriarca pleaded guilty in December 1991 to racketeering and conspiracy charges, but he refused to admit he was a member of the Mafia, clinging to his vow of ‘omerta’ to the secret organization.
- 2006 October 27, Los Angeles Times:
- There was a time that high-profile killings such as the 1968 assassinations of Robert F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr. brought passionate cries for limitations on handguns. A bipartisan omerta now smothers the issue.
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Coordinate terms
Translations
code of silence amongst members of the Mafia or other criminal organization
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Italian
Etymology
Southern dialectal form of umiltà (“humility”), from Latin humilitātem, accusative of humilitās, from humilis (“humble”), from humus (“ground, soil”). See Sicilian umirtà.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /o.merˈta/, [omerˈt̪ä]
- Rhymes: -a
- Hyphenation: o‧mer‧tà
Noun
omertà f (invariable)
- (rare, dialectal, southern Italy) Alternative form of umiltà (“humility”)
- (crime) An omertà or any code of silence.
- Synonym: (wall of silence): reticenza
- (extensively, derogatory) A form of solidarity among members of a group, constisting in hiding compromising truths; a wall of silence.
Derived terms
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