A crèche is a representation of the Nativity scene or a nursery or day care center for young children. The word comes from an old term for 'manger'.
Crèche (noun) refers to a representation of the Nativity scene or a day care center for young children. It originated from an Old English word for 'crib' or 'manger.'
Word | crèche |
---|---|
Date | December 25, 2015 |
Type | noun |
Syllables | KRESH |
Etymology | "She wrapped him in swaddling clothes and laid him in a cratch." That may not sound like a familiar translation of Luke 2:7, but back in the 1300s, the substitution of cratch for manger probably wouldn't have raised any eyebrows. Back then spelling was imprecise, and several different words and spellings, including cratch, cracche, crache, and crecche, were used to describe a trough for holding feed for livestock or to identify the manger where Jesus was laid. By the late 18th century, crèche (which we borrowed from French and now sometimes spell without the accent mark) had displaced those older forms, and the word had lost its former "manger" meaning, coming to refer instead to a representation of the Nativity scene itself. |
Examples | A crèche was erected on the lawn in front of the church. "Goldman has a creche in the basement of the building and Tefridj-Gaillard has used it in the past when other childcare fell through." — Rosamund Urwin, The Evening Standard, 17 Nov. 2015 |
Definition | 1 : a representation of the Nativity scene 2 : a nursery or day care center 3 : a group of young animals (such as penguins or bats) gathered in one place for care and protection usually by one or more adults |
Tags: wordoftheday::noun
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