quintal
English
Pronunciation
- (US) IPA(key): /ˈkwɪntl/, /ˈkwɪnl/
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈkwɪntl/, /ˈkwɪntəl/
Audio (Southern England) (file) - Rhymes: (Received Pronunciation) -ɪntəl
Alternative forms
Etymology 1
Late Middle English, from Anglo-Norman quintal, from Middle French quintal, from Old French and Medieval Latin quintale and quintallus (“various medieval hundredweights”), from Arabic قِنْطَار (qinṭār, “100 rottols”), from Classical Syriac ܩܰܢܛܺܝܪܳܐ (qanṭīrā) and ܩܰܢܛܺܝܢܳܪܳܐ (qanṭīnārā), from Byzantine Greek κεντηνάριον (kentēnárion), from Latin centēnārium (“100 Roman pounds”), from the neuter of centēnārius (“having 100 things”). Use for various non-English units, borrowed from French quintal, Spanish quintal, Portuguese quintal, etc. The apparent relation to quint- (“five, fivefold”) and -al (“forming adjectives”) is accidental, although it possibly influenced the eventual spelling of the term. Doublet of centenary and kantar.
Noun
quintal (plural quintals)
- (historical) Synonym of hundredweight, 100 or 112 English or American pounds.
- 2011, Thomas Penn, Winter King, Penguin, published 2012, page 204:
- In one import license alone, the merchant in question was instructed to bring in 13,000 quintals of alum, which, snapped up by industries in England and the Low Countries, would yield the king a cool £8,666 13s 4d.
- (historical) Various other similar units of weight in other systems.
- An unofficial metric unit equal to 100 kg.
Usage notes
Historically, the value varied with local values of pounds by time, location, and substance. At the time of metricization, the French quintal was 49.951 kg, the Portuguese quintal was 58.75 kg, the Spanish quintal was 46.014 kg, and the Milanese quintal was 32.67 kg. The present metric quintal is not officially recognized as part of the metric system.
Coordinate terms
Derived terms
- metric quintal
Translations
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Noun
quintal (plural quintals)
- (grammar) A grammatical number referring to five (or more) things.
- 2002, Kearsy Annette Cormier, Grammaticization of Indexic Signs: How American Sign Language Expresses Numerosity, page 69:
- Furthermore, if the number-incorporated pronouns are analyzed as grammatically marked for number, distinct grammatical categories for trial, quadral and quintal must be posited.
- 2014, Sam Lutalo-Kiingi, A Descriptive Grammar of Morphosyntactic Constructions in Ugandan Sign Language (UgSL), page 198:
- In UgSL, we find a complete set of forms for dual, trial, quadral and quintal in several paradigmatic contrasts.
- 2023, Raquel Veiga Busto, Person and Number: An Empirical Study of Catalan Sign Language Pronouns, page 164:
- All in all, this suggests that in LSC the differences observed in the motion taken by exact number pronouns is not grounded in a fundamental distinction between the dual vs. the trial, the quadral and the quintal.
Adjective
quintal (not comparable)
- (grammar) Referring to five (or more) things; of, in or relating to the quintal grammatical number.
- 1995, John W. M. Verhaar, Toward a Reference Grammar of Tok Pisin: An Experiment in Corpus Linguistics, page 20:
- What Table 4 does not show is the possibility of even "quadral" and "quintal" forms, like yufopela 'you four', 'the four of you', yufaipela 'you five', 'the five of you'.
- 2014, Sam Lutalo-Kiingi, A Descriptive Grammar of Morphosyntactic Constructions in Ugandan Sign Language (UgSL), page 198:
- In sign languages, on the other hand, trial, quadral and quintal forms such as found in UgSL are not uncommon.
- 2023, Raquel Veiga Busto, Person and Number: An Empirical Study of Catalan Sign Language Pronouns, page 102:
- Moreover, trial, quadral and quintal forms are given an identical status as number values in the pronominal domain.
Usage notes
- It has been contested whether this grammatical phenomenon exists in human languages. If it does, it is almost entirely confined to sign languages. See also Grammatical number.
References
- Oxford English Dictionary, 1884–1928, and First Supplement, 1933.
French
Etymology
Inherited from Old French quintal, from Medieval Latin quintāle (“various medieval hundredweights”), from Arabic قِنْطَار (qinṭār, “100 rottols”), from Classical Syriac ܩܰܢܛܺܝܪܳܐ (qanṭīrā) and ܩܰܢܛܺܝܢܳܪܳܐ (qanṭīnārā), from Byzantine Greek κεντηνάριον (kentēnárion), from Latin centēnārium (“100 Roman pounds”), from centēnī (“100 things”) + -ārius (“-ary: forming related adjectives”). Doublet of centenaire.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /kɛ̃.tal/
Audio (file)
Noun
quintal m (plural quintaux)
- quintal, a nonstandard metric unit of mass equivalent to exactly 100 kg
- (historical) quintal, French hundredweight, a traditional unit of mass equivalent to about 49.95 kg
Further reading
- “quintal”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
Middle French
Etymology
From Old French quintal, from Medieval Latin quintāle (“various medieval hundredweights”), from Arabic قِنْطَار (qinṭār, “100 rottols”), from Classical Syriac ܩܰܢܛܺܝܪܳܐ (qanṭīrā) and ܩܰܢܛܺܝܢܳܪܳܐ (qanṭīnārā), from Byzantine Greek κεντηνάριον (kentēnárion), from Latin centēnārium (“100 Roman pounds”), from centēnī (“100 things”) + -ārius (“-ary: forming related adjectives”).
Noun
quintal m (plural quintaulx)
- (historical) quintal, French hundredweight, a traditional unit of mass
Old French
Etymology
From Medieval Latin quintāle (“various medieval hundredweights”), from Arabic قِنْطَار (qinṭār, “100 rottols”), from Classical Syriac ܩܰܢܛܺܝܪܳܐ (qanṭīrā) and ܩܰܢܛܺܝܢܳܪܳܐ (qanṭīnārā), from Byzantine Greek κεντηνάριον (kentēnárion), from Latin centēnārium (“100 Roman pounds”), from centēnī (“100 things”) + -ārius (“-ary: forming related adjectives”).
Portuguese
Pronunciation
- (Brazil) IPA(key): /kĩˈtaw/ [kĩˈtaʊ̯]
- (Portugal) IPA(key): /kĩˈtal/ [kĩˈtaɫ]
- (Southern Portugal) IPA(key): /kĩˈta.li/
- Rhymes: (Portugal) -al, (Brazil) -aw
- Hyphenation: quin‧tal
Etymology 1
Inherited from Old Galician-Portuguese quintãal, from Vulgar Latin *quintanālem; equivalent to quinta + -al.
Noun
quintal m (plural quintais)
Etymology 2
From Medieval Latin quintāle (“various medieval hundredweights”), from Andalusian Arabic and Arabic قِنْطَار (qinṭār, “100 rottols”), from Classical Syriac ܩܰܢܛܺܝܪܳܐ (qanṭīrā) and ܩܰܢܛܺܝܢܳܪܳܐ (qanṭīnārā), from Byzantine Greek κεντηνάριον (kentēnárion), from Latin centēnārium (“100 Roman pounds”). Doublet of centenário.
Noun
quintal m (plural quintais)
- quintal, a nonstandard unit of mass equal to 100 kg
- (historical) quintal, Portuguese hundredweight, a traditional unit of mass usually equivalent to 58.7 kg
Synonyms
- (metric unit): quintal métrico
Coordinate terms
- (historical unit): arrátel (1⁄128 quintal), arroba (1⁄4 quintal), quintalejo (1⁄2 quintal), tonelada (13 1⁄2 quintals)
Derived terms
Spanish
Alternative forms
Etymology
Borrowed from Medieval Latin quintāle (“various medieval hundredweights”), from Andalusian Arabic and Arabic قِنْطَار (qinṭār, “100 rottols”), from Classical Syriac ܩܰܢܛܺܝܪܳܐ (qanṭīrā) and ܩܰܢܛܺܝܢܳܪܳܐ (qanṭīnārā), from Byzantine Greek κεντηνάριον (kentēnárion), from Latin centēnārium (“100 Roman pounds”), from centēnī (“100 things”) + -ārius (“-ary: forming related adjectives”). Doublet of centenario.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /kinˈtal/ [kĩn̪ˈt̪al]
- Rhymes: -al
- Syllabification: quin‧tal
Noun
quintal m (plural quintales)
- quintal (an unofficial metric unit of mass equal to exactly 100 kg)
- (chiefly historical) quintal, Spanish hundredweight (a traditional unit of mass equivalent to about 46 kg)
Usage notes
- Historically, the quintal varied by region, over time, and depending on the object being measured.
Derived terms
Related terms
Descendants
- Zoogocho Zapotec: quintal
Further reading
- “quintal”, in Diccionario de la lengua española, Vigésima tercera edición, Real Academia Española, 2014
Zoogocho Zapotec
References
- Long C., Rebecca, Cruz M., Sofronio (2000) Diccionario zapoteco de San Bartolomé Zoogocho, Oaxaca (Serie de vocabularios y diccionarios indígenas “Mariano Silva y Aceves”; 38) (in Spanish), second electronic edition, Coyoacán, D.F.: Instituto Lingüístico de Verano, A.C., page 286