Italian edit

Etymology edit

From Latin Capitōlium, perhaps folk-etymologized as campi d'oglio (fields of oglio), with the last element taken as some kind of proper name[1] or oglio, the local dialectal word for oil.

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): /kam.piˈdɔʎ.ʎo/
  • Rhymes: -ɔʎʎo
  • Hyphenation: Cam‧pi‧dò‧glio

Proper noun edit

Campidoglio m

  1. Capitolium
  2. the Capitoline Hill, one of the Seven hills of Rome
    Synonym: Monte Capitolino
  3. (narrowing) an ancient square located on top of the hill
  4. (narrowing) the Senatorial Palace, representative of the municipality of Rome
  5. (figurative, by extension) the ruling center of a country
    • 2020 June 11, Silvia Luperini, “Pelosi contro Trump: "Via dal Campidoglio le statue dei leader confederati"”, in La Repubblica[1], archived from the original on 28 September 2022:
      Bisogna rimuovere le statue di generali e leader confederati dal complesso del Campidoglio perché sono "un tributo all'odio" []
      We need to remove the statues of confederate generals and leaders from the complex of the Capitol because they are a "tribute to hate" []
  6. (metonymically) the mayor of the Rome municipality

Coordinate terms edit

hills of Rome

Related terms edit

References edit

  1. ^ Alkire, Ti, Rosen, Carol (2010) Romance Languages: A Historical Introduction, University of Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, page 306

Further reading edit