athame

English dictionary entry

Meanings

noun
  1. A ceremonial pointed knife or dagger, used especially in Wicca and other neopagan traditions and typically having a black handle with magical symbols on it.

Pronunciation

/əˈθeɪmeɪ/ /əˈθɑːmeɪ/ /ɑˈθɑ.meɪ/ /əˈθɑ.meɪ/ /ˈæ.θəˌmeɪ/

Word forms

athame athames athamé

Etymology

From French athamé in a 1929 passage from É.-J. Grillot de Givry (see 1931 citation below), apparently from Medieval Latin artavus (“quill-sharpening knife”). Artavus was also mistranslated into artauo in an Italian manuscript. The arthame was conflated with the cortel nero (“black knife”) by Grillot de Givry, and that conflation was passed on to Gerald Gardner (whose 1954 book Witchcraft Today introduced Wicca to the public).

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