diabolo

noun
/dɪˈæbələʊ/UK

Etymology

Borrowed from French diabolo, from older diable (literally “devil”), fancifully altered after cognate Italian diavolo and/or their common source, Latin diabolus. First attested in the early 20th century. The Latin noun is from Ancient Greek διάβολος (diábolos, “devil”), itself derived from the verb διαβάλλω (diabállō, “to slander”, literally “to throw across”). The notion that this literal sense of “throw across” could be applied to the diabolo itself has led some commentators to assume a direct semantic connection, but there is no evidence suggesting that it is anything other than a coincidence.

  1. derived from διάβολος — “devil
  2. derived from diabolus
  3. derived from diavolo
  4. borrowed from diabolo

Definitions

  1. A juggling apparatus consisting of a spool which is whirled and tossed on a string…

    A juggling apparatus consisting of a spool which is whirled and tossed on a string attached to handsticks.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for diabolo. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA