English edit

Noun edit

carabin (plural carabins)

  1. Archaic form of carbine.
    • 1873, Charles Grey, A Narrative of Italian Travels in Persia, page 17:
      Their arms are a scimitar, a brace of pistols, a carabin, and sometimes a lance, or a bow and arrow — all of which they alternately use, at full speed, with the utmost skill and dexterity.

French edit

Etymology edit

1583 in the sense "light cavalrist". Later (1803) also "medical student". Etymology uncertain, suggestions include scarrabin "corpse-bearer during the plague" (1521), probably an ironic metaphor from a meaning "plague beetle" (from the family of escarbot, from Latin scarabaeus). This suggestion implies that the soldiers called carabins were named after their reputation of rapidly and reliably dispatching of their enemies. Alternatively, the meaning "medical student" may be primary, the ironic meaning being attached to "surgeons" (carabin de St Côme, recorded 1650, Saint Cosmas being their patron), with the transfer to "light cavalrist" taking place with a certain military unit enroled under the banner of the same saint.

Possibly ultimately related to or from Arabic خَرَبَ (ḵaraba, to ruin).

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): /ka.ʁa.bɛ̃/
  • (file)

Noun edit

carabin m (plural carabins)

  1. carabineer
  2. medical student

Further reading edit