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View synonyms for portmanteau

portmanteau

[ pawrt-man-toh, pawrt-man-toh ]

noun

, plural port·man·teaus, port·man·teaux [pawrt-, man, -tohz, -toh, pawrt-man-, tohz, -, toh].
  1. Chiefly British. a case or bag to carry clothing in while traveling, especially a leather trunk or suitcase that opens into two halves.
  2. Linguistics.
    1. Also called port·man·teau word. a word that combines the form and meaning of two or more other words; a blend.
    2. Also called port·man·teau morph. a phonological unit of more than one morpheme, as French au (to the) from à to + le masculine article, which realizes a preposition and the definite article; a single morph that is analyzed as representing two underlying morphemes.
  3. something that combines or blends several items, features, or qualities:

    I've gathered a portmanteau of ideas from my colleagues.



adjective

  1. combining or blending several items, features, or qualities:

    a portmanteau film with two good stories.

portmanteau

/ pɔːtˈmæntəʊ /

noun

  1. (formerly) a large travelling case made of stiff leather, esp one hinged at the back so as to open out into two compartments
  2. modifier embodying several uses or qualities

    the heroine is a portmanteau figure of all the virtues



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Word History and Origins

Origin of portmanteau1

From French portemanteau literally, “(it) carries (the) cloak”; port 5, mantle; portmanteau def 1 was first recorded in 1575–85, and portmanteau def 2a in 1871 in Through the Looking Glass by Lewis Carroll.

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Word History and Origins

Origin of portmanteau1

C16: from French: cloak carrier, from porter to carry + manteau cloak, mantle

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Example Sentences

Marketers love a portmanteau, and this one refers to the blending of physical and digital realms that gathered steam due to the pandemic.

From Digiday

Plogging—a portmanteau of jogging and the Swedish term plocka upp, which means “pick up”—was created in 2016 by Erik Ahlstrom, a Swedish runner who was tired of seeing so much trash on his daily jogs.

One of my biggest concerns was balancing work and vacation, and not tipping the portmanteau scale too far in one direction.

Making this dish for my Jamaican husband and our two small “Trin-Ja-Merican” children — a fitting portmanteau to describe their multicultural heritage — I appreciate the warmth and satiating quality that aloo and channa confers.

This dermatological condition—a portmanteau of “mask” and “acne”—affects people of all ages and skin types, regardless of whether they have a history of skin irritation.

Allie calls it “Fat Boy,” an unsubtle portmanteau of the nicknames—“Fat Man” and “Little Boy”—given the bombs dropped over Japan.

And yet, they got over it and would go on to earn the portmanteau "Merkozy."

Whichever way you look at it, the are-they-or-aren't-they couple earned the portmanteau Brittana and a lot of attention.

A portmanteau by way of the frontier, this term was given flight by Sarah Palin.

This longing for grimness actually has its own portmanteau word, ostalgie.

The portmanteau was the sign of youth and progress; old-fashioned people stuck to the carpet bag.

Such thoughts as these passed through the worthy officer's mind as he carefully packed his portmanteau.

He had not even had the energy to finish his packing, and his clothes and papers lay on the floor about the portmanteau.

When they saw my portmanteau (twenty-five pounds in weight), they were quite puzzled to know what to do with it.

And he rose at once, reshouldered the portmanteau, and taking the candle in his other hand, moved forward to the Lodge.

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Port Lyauteyportmanteau word