admiral

English dictionary entry

Meanings

noun
  1. The commander of a naval squadron or fleet, regardless of formal rank.
  2. The appointed commander of a navy, regardless of formal title.
  3. A high rank in the British and American Navies, NATO grade OF-9, equivalent ranks in other navies, in coast guards, etc.
  4. The commander of a fishing or merchant fleet, particularly (historical, Canada) a captain granted special privileges in exchange for bringing the first ship of a given fishing season to certain harbors in Newfoundland.
  5. Any of several species of nymphalid butterflies of the genera Kaniska, Limenitis and Vanessa.
  6. The shell of the Conus ammiralis; the cone shells of various other species displaying similarly intricate banding.
  7. Synonym of flagship: an admiral's ship in a fleet, the command or largest ship in a naval or commercial fleet.
  8. Synonym of emir, a Muslim commander or prince.
  9. Any of several varieties of pear, the trees which produce them.
noun
  1. Alternative letter-case form of admiral in its various senses.

Pronunciation

/ˈædməɹəl/ /ˈædmɹəl/ /ˈædməɹl/ /ˈædmɚəl/ [æd.mɹəl] en-us-admiral.ogg

Word forms

admiral admirals Adm. Adm adml. admyralle amyrall admarall admerell admerolle admirell admyrell amerall ammyrall amral amrell amrelle admirail admiralle admyral admyrall amiral amirall ammiral admeral admerall ammirall admirant amrall ammirant admirall admirante admirel

Etymology

From Middle English admiral etc., from Anglo-Norman and Old French admiral etc., from Medieval Latin admiralis, admirallus, and admiralius, from irregular modification of amiralis etc. under the influence of the prefix ad- and particularly admiror (“to admire, respect”), from Arabic أَمِير (ʔamīr, “commander”) + -alis (“-al”). The ending is frequently but mistakenly folk etymologized to derive from the article ال (al-), particularly in Arabic أَمِير اَلبَحْر (ʔamīr al-baḥr, “commander of the sea”), first attested as a Fatimid office, or in Arabic أَمِير الْمُؤْمِنِين (ʔamīr al-muʔminīn, “Commander of the Believers, caliph”). It seems instead to have been borrowed from modification of only the first term in Arabic أَمِير الْأُمَرَاء (ʔamīr al-ʔumarāʔ, “emir of emirs, commander-in-chief”) as used as a title for important commanders in Norman Sicily in the mid-12th century. First attested as an English rank in reference to Gervase Alard of Winchelsea as "admiral of the fleet of the Cinque Ports". Doublet of emir, amir, Amir, and amira. Etymology tree Arabic أَمِير (ʔamīr) Proto-Indo-European *h₂el-der.? Proto-Italic *-ālis Medieval Latin -ālis ▲ Latin admīrorinflu. Medieval Latin admirālisder. Old French admiralder. Middle English admiral English admiral

Synonyms

Derived words

admiral butterfly admiral cone admiralcy admiraless admiral-in-chief admiral of the blue admiral of the fleet Admiral of the Navy admiral of the red admiral of the sea admiral of the Swiss Navy admiral of the white admiral pear admiral sauce admiral shell admiral ship admiralship admiralty blue admiral brown admiral commodore admiral Dutch admiral fishing admiral fleet admiral full admiral general admiral grand admiral High Admiral Kentucky Admiral lieutenant admiral Lord High Admiral Lorquin's admiral port admiral rear admiral red admiral ride admiral scarlet admiral squadron admiral sub-admiral tap the admiral under-admiral vice admiral white admiral yellow admiral
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