: a cement made of lime, sand or gravel, and oyster shells and used chiefly along the coast of Georgia and South Carolina in the 17th and 18th centuries
Examples of tabby in a Sentence
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Noun
In March, Stacey, 28, adopted an orange tabby rescue cat, Fergie.—Faisal Kutty, Newsweek, 12 Mar. 2025 Speedo, a 15-year-old sweetheart, lived a life of comfort until his owner got sick and could no longer care for the tabby any longer, his pet profile said.—Tj MacIas, Miami Herald, 12 Mar. 2025
Adjective
Loki is tabby and white while Onyx is a brown tabby, both are neutered and up-to-date on vaccinations.—Staff Report, Hartford Courant, 15 Mar. 2025 The shots include a picture of the tabby cat wedged in a tight spot under the car's hood and an image of a rescuer petting the feline after freeing the animal.—Kirsty Hatcher, People.com, 13 Mar. 2025 See All Example Sentences for tabby
Word History
Etymology
Noun (1)
French tabis, from Middle French atabis, from Medieval Latin attabi, from Arabic ʽattābī, from Al-ʽAttābīya, quarter in Baghdad
Noun (2)
Gullah tabi, ultimately from Spanish tapia adobe wall
from French tabis "a silk fabric with a lustrous wavy finish," from Latin attabi (same meaning), from Arabic 'attābī (same meaning), from Al-'Attābīya, name of a part of Baghdad where the cloth was made
Word Origin
A silk cloth with a striped or wavy pattern was once made in a section of the ancient city of Baghdad in what is now Iraq. The Arabic name for the cloth was 'attābī, from Al-'Attābīya, the name of the part of the city where it was made. Through Latin, the French borrowed this word for the cloth, calling it tabis. This word in turn became tabby in English. People saw a resemblance between the striped or wavy pattern of the silk and cats that had striped or spotted markings on their fur. Thus these cats came to be called tabby cats after the cloth.
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