[ˈkuŋkɐ]
OrixeFrom Old Galician-Portuguese cunca, from Latin concha (“mussel, vessel”), from Ancient Greek κόγχη (kónkhē, “shell, mussel”).
- femininebowl
“mando a miña Neta Tareija sanches todo o aliofar et coraes que eu ey et os esmaltes et o meu Reliquario esmaltado et a miña Cunca de plata dourada et as miñas doas de ouro” — I send to my granddaughter Tareixa Sanchez all of my pearls and corals, and the enamels, and my enamelled relicary and my gilded silver bowl and my beads of gold
“Iten, das cunqas e talladores e poças e barcaas e de outras quaes quer vaselas de madeira, que page o vendedor de cada tres mrs un diñeiro” — Item, of the bowls, and plates, and large bowls, and trays, and any other wooden vessel, the seller should pay a denary per three mrs.
- femininebasin
- feminine, historicalcunca, a traditional unit of dry measure equivalent to about 1–1.5 L depending on the substance measured
- feminine, historicalcunca, a traditional measure of land area equivalent to the amount of land that could be sown with a cunca of seed
- femininedimple
- feminineeye socket, orbit
Formascuncas(plural) · conca(alternative)