alb

[alb] /ælb/
noun, Ecclesiastical
1.
a linen vestment with narrow sleaves, worn chiefly by priests, now invariably white in the Western Church but any color in the Eastern Church.
Origin
before 1100; Middle English albe, (h)aube (< MF), Old English albe < Latin alba (vestis) white (garment); compare Dutch albe, Old High German alba (German Albe)

Alb.

1.
2.
3.
4.

alb.

1.
(in prescriptions) white.
Origin
< Latin albus
British Dictionary definitions for alb

alb

/ælb/
noun
1.
(Christianity) a long white linen vestment with sleeves worn by priests and others
Word Origin
Old English albe, from Medieval Latin alba (vestis) white (clothing)

Alb.

abbreviation
1.
Albania(n)
Word Origin and History for alb
n.

late Old English albe, from Late Latin alba (in tunica alba or vestis alba "white vestment"), fem. of albus "white," from PIE root *albho- "white" (cf. Greek alphos "white leprosy," alphiton "barley meal;" Old High German albiz, Old English elfet "swan," literally "the white bird;" Old Church Slavonic and Russian lebedi, Polish łabędź "swan;" Hittite alpash "cloud").

Related Abbreviations for alb

ALB

Albany International Airport

Alb.

  1. Albania
  2. Albanian
  3. Albany
  4. Alberta

alb.

albumen
Encyclopedia Article for alb

liturgical vestment worn in some services by Roman Catholic officiants, some Anglicans, and some Lutherans. A symbol of purity, it is a full-length, long-sleeved, usually white linen tunic secured at the waist by a cord or belt called a cincture. The equivalent vestment in the Eastern churches is the sticharion.

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