pazzo
Italian
Etymology
Uncertain. Perhaps a Lombardic or Carolingian era borrowing from Old High German barrezzen (“to hate”) or maybe from French page (“page, serving boy”), probably via Neapolitan pazzë (compare French adage “être effronté comme un page”). Alternatively from Latin patiēns (“suffering”)[1].
Adjective
pazzo (feminine singular pazza, masculine plural pazzi, feminine plural pazze)
Derived terms
Noun
pazzo m (plural pazzi, feminine pazza)
- madman
- Synonym: matto
- 1973, “Alice”, in Alice no lo sa, performed by Francesco De Gregori:
- "Ma io non ci sto più e i pazzi siete voi" / Tutti pensarono dietro ai cappelli
References
Anagrams
This article is issued from
Wiktionary.
The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike.
Additional terms may apply for the media files.