pashmina

English

Etymology

From Classical Persian پَشْمِینَه (pašmīna). Compare پشمین (pašmīn / pašmin).

Noun

pashmina (countable and uncountable, plural pashminas)

  1. A Cashmere; a goat native to Kashmir.
    Synonyms: Changthangi, Changpa
  2. The fine wool that grows under the hair of this goat; cashmere.
  3. A soft fabric made from this wool; (in particular) a shawl made from this fabric.
    • 1964, Lora Bryning Redford, Nathan Goldstein, Getting to know the northern Himalayas: Kashmir, Tibet, Assam, New York: Coward-McCann, page 26:
      However, Leh's most important product is the soft underwool of sheep and goats, most of which are tended by nomads, men who roam about the uplands with their herds. It is this fine, soft wool which is used to make the famous pashmina shawls of Kashmir.
    • 2004, Monika Fagerholm, Translator Kathleen Tucker, The American Girl, Other Press, published 2009, page 66:
      Pashmina was invented more than four hundred years ago when Nur Jaban, wife of the Emperor Jehangir, asked her weavers to present a woolen fabric that was "as light as a cloud but as warm as a tender embrace."

Translations

French

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /paʃ.mi.na/

Noun

pashmina m (plural pashminas)

  1. pashmina

Spanish

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /paʃˈmina/ [paʃˈmi.na]
  • Rhymes: -ina
  • Syllabification: pash‧mi‧na

Noun

pashmina f (plural pashminas)

  1. pashmina