Sunday, September 18 at 4 PM – 6 PM
Berl’s Brooklyn Poetry Shop
141 Front Street, Brooklyn, NY
fabric (n.)
late 15c., “building; thing made; a structure of any kind,” from Middle French fabrique (14c.), verbal noun from fabriquer (13c.), from Latin fabricare “to make, construct, fashion, build,” from fabrica “workshop,” also “an art, trade; a skillful production, structure, fabric,” from faber “artisan who works in hard materials,” from Proto-Italic *fafro-, from PIE *dhabh- “to fit together” (source also of Armenian darbin “smith;” also see daft).
The noun fabrica suggests the earlier existence of a feminine noun to which an adj. *fabriko- referred; maybe ars “art, craft.”
Sense in English evolved via “manufactured material” (1753) to “textile, woven or felted cloth” (1791). Compare forge (n.)) which is a doublet.