sericulture

English

WOTD – 12 August 2019

Etymology

A woman in a silk factory in Hotan, Xinjiang, China, extracting silk fibres from silkworm cocoons

Possibly borrowed from French sériculture, a modification of French sériciculture (sericulture) (or directly from sériciculture),[1] from Late Latin sēricum (Chinese goods, especially silk) + French culture (crop; culture).[2] Sēricum is derived from Latin sēricus (of or pertaining to the Seres or Chinese; (by extension) made of silk, silken), from Sēres (northern Chinese people), from Ancient Greek Σῆρες (Sêres, the Chinese people; the land of the Chinese, China), plural of Σήρ (Sḗr, (rare, usually in plural) Chinese person; silkworm), possibly from Old Chinese (*[s]ə, silk).

Pronunciation

Noun

sericulture (usually uncountable, plural sericultures)

  1. (agriculture) The rearing of silkworms for the production of silk. [from mid 19th c.]
    Synonym: sericiculture

Derived terms

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Further reading

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