filamento
Galician
Etymology
Borrowed from Medieval Latin fīlāmentum, from Late Latin fīlō (“to spin, draw out in a long line”), from Latin fīlum (“thread”).
Noun
filamento m (plural filamentos)
- filament
Italian
Etymology
Borrowed from Medieval Latin fīlāmentum, from Late Latin fīlō (“to spin, draw out in a long line”), from Latin fīlum (“thread”).
Noun
filamento m (plural filamenti)
- filament
Related terms
- filare
- filo
Portuguese
Etymology
Borrowed from Medieval Latin fīlāmentum, from Late Latin fīlō (“to spin, draw out in a long line”), from Latin fīlum (“thread”).
Noun
filamento m (plural filamentos)
- filament (fine thread or wire)
- filament (wire in an incandescent light bulb)
- (botany) filament (stalk of a stamen in a flower)
Related terms
- fiar
- fio
Spanish
Etymology
Borrowed from Medieval Latin fīlāmentum, from Late Latin fīlō (“to spin, draw out in a long line”), from Latin fīlum (“thread”).
Noun
filamento m (plural filamentos)
- filament
Derived terms
- filamentoso
Related terms
- filo
- hilar
- hilo
Further reading
- “filamento”, in Diccionario de la lengua española, Vigésima tercera edición, Real Academia Española, 2014