Talk:Camlet
Latest comment: 6 years ago by Wool Bridge in topic From Arabic Khaml meaning wool pile
A fact from Camlet appeared on Wikipedia's Main Page in the Did you know column on 31 May 2006. The text of the entry was as follows:
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From Arabic Khaml meaning wool pile
editAppears in British Latin texts from at least 1235. The OED adds: 'at the earliest known date the word was associated (by Europeans) with camel, as if stuff made of camel's hair; but there is reason to think it was originally the Arabic khamlat, from khaml; Marco Polo (ed. Yule) I. 248 (Skeat). Khaml, khamlat, is explained by Lane as "the nap or pile or villous substance on the surface of cloth"; khamlat, by Johnson, as "camelot, silk and camel's hair, also, all silk or velvet, especially pily and plushy"'. ['camlet, n.', OED, 2nd ed. (1989)] On the borrowing into the Welsh, see Parry-Williams (1923)a, p.79.
From Arabic خمل، خملة hence مخمل