citadel - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From French citadelle, from Italian cittadella, diminutive of città (“city”), from Latin cīvitās.
citadel (plural citadels)
- A strong fortress that sits high above a city.
1906, Lord Dunsany [i.e., Edward Plunkett, 18th Baron of Dunsany], Time and the Gods[1], London: William Heineman, →OCLC, page 1:
In the city’s midst the gleaming marble of a thousand steps climbed to the citadel where arose four pinnacles beckoning to heaven, and midmost between the pinnacles there stood the dome, vast, as the gods had dreamed it.
- (sometimes figurative) A stronghold or fortified place.
1836, Alexander Slidell Mackenzie, The American in England, page 269:
Intrenched within the citadel of our apartment, and cheered by the comfortings of a coal fire, we passed the day in letter-writing, conversation, or gazing from the sheltered security of our windows upon the agitated sea […]
- An armoured portion of a warship, housing important equipment.
2000, Lincoln P. Paine, Warships of the World to 1900:
Twenty-two of these — eleven per broadside — were on the main deck within a central citadel, essentially an armor-protected box in the middle of the ship. Also within the citadel were four 110-pdr. breech-loaders.
- A Salvation Army meeting place.
a strong fortress that sits high above a city
- Arabic: مَعْقِل (ar) m (maʕqil)
- Armenian: միջնաբերդ (hy) (miǰnaberd)
- Aromanian: tsitati f, grãditã f
- Belarusian: цытадэ́ль f (cytadélʹ)
- Bulgarian: цитаде́ла (bg) f (citadéla)
- Catalan: ciutadella (ca) f
- Chinese:
- Czech: citadela (cs) f
- Dutch: citadel (nl) m or f
- Esperanto: citadelo, altaĵo (eo)
- Estonian: tsitadel
- Finnish: sitadelli (fi)
- French: citadelle (fr) f
- Georgian: ციტადელი (ciṭadeli)
- German: Zitadelle (de) f
- Greek: ακρόπολη (el) f (akrópoli)
- Hebrew: מְצוּדָה (he) f (metzudá)
- Hungarian: citadella (hu), fellegvár (hu)
- Italian: cittadella (it) f
- Japanese: 城塞 (ja) (じょうさい, jōsai)
- Korean: 성채 (seongchae)
- Latin: arx (la)
- Latvian: citadele f
- Lithuanian: citadelė f
- Macedonian: цитадела f (citadela)
- Maori: tihi, toitoi
- Ottoman Turkish: ارك (erk)
- Persian: ارگ (fa) (arg), کلات (fa) (kalât)
- Polish: cytadela (pl) f
- Portuguese: cidadela (pt) f
- Romanian: citadelă (ro) f, cetate (ro)
- Russian: цитаде́ль (ru) f (citadɛ́lʹ), кре́пость (ru) f (krépostʹ)
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Slovak: citadela f
- Slovene: citadela (sl) f
- Spanish: ciudadela (es) f, alcázar (es) m
- Swedish: citadell (sv) n
- Tagalog: moog
- Ukrainian: цитаде́ль (uk) f (cytadélʹ)
- Uzbek: ark (uz)
- Vietnamese: thành luỹ (vi), thành trì (vi), thành quách (vi)
a stronghold or fortified place
- Albanian: kala (sq) f, fortesë (sq) f
- Arabic: مَعْقِل (ar) m (maʕqil), قَلْعَة f (qalʕa), قِلْعَة f (qilʕa)
- Belarusian: цытадэ́ль f (cytadélʹ)
- Bulgarian: цитаде́ла (bg) f (citadéla)
- Catalan: ciutadella (ca) f
- Chinese:
- Czech: citadela (cs) f
- Dutch: citadel (nl) m or f
- Finnish: linnoitus (fi), linnake (fi)
- French: citadelle (fr) f
- German: Zitadelle (de) f
- Italian: cittadella (it) f
- Japanese: 城塞 (ja) (じょうさい, jōsai)
- Korean: 성채 (seongchae)
- Latin: arx (la)
- Macedonian: цитадела f (citadela)
- Ottoman Turkish: حصن (hısn)
- Polish: cytadela (pl) f
- Portuguese: cidadela (pt) f
- Romanian: citadelă (ro) f, fortificație (ro) f, cetate (ro) f
- Russian: цитаде́ль (ru) f (citadɛ́lʹ), кре́пость (ru) f (krépostʹ)
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Slovak: citadela f
- Slovene: citadela (sl) f
- Turkish: hisar (tr)
- Ukrainian: цитаде́ль (uk) f (cytadélʹ)
- Vietnamese: thành trì (vi)
- Welsh: chadarnle m
Borrowe from Middle French citadelle, from Italian cittadella, diminutive of città (“city”), from Latin cīvitās.
citadel f (plural citadellen or citadels, diminutive citadelletje n)