TEMA
Latin Lemma
thema < Gk θέμα
Latin POS
N
Latin Meaning
"subject, topic, theme; disposition of heavenly bodies at a person's birth: a horoscope" L&S
Spanish
Portuguese
Portuguese Lemma
tema
Portuguese Variants
temas
Portuguese POS
Portuguese Morphologically related words
temático (ADJ), temática (N), tematologia (N), tematológico (ADJ) Houaiss
Ranking/frequency in Portuguese
Portuguese First attestation
E, emtrados em no capitulo, o fraire que hia por primçipall começou de pregar ferventemente e tomou por tema Parvulus natus est nobis, que quer dizer, moçinho he a nos naçido. (CDPGH: Crónica da Ordem dos Frades Menores, 1209-1285, 15C)
e Frey Gil Lobo, grande Letrado, fez ho Sermom com tema ao auto conforme (CDPGH: Rui de Pina (1440–1522), Crónica de D. Duarte)
Portuguese Historical frequency (per million words)
French
Italian
English
Cultural transmission
Thema seems to have been familiar in Medieval Latin, where it developed its meanings of "subject or text of a sermon" and "logical proposition", the initial meanings of the borrowing in the vernaculars, suggesting common adaptation. Later technical meanings also suggest a common usage within western European cultural communities. The collocations noted in modern English are sometimes calqued into other languages, with, for example, Sp. parque temático overtaking parque de atracciones in frequency from 2000 onwards (Google ngram viewer). It is not clear that the secondary Lat. meaning of "disposition of heavenly bodies at a person's birth: a horoscope" was intially paralleled; this may have been a later restitution. All other meanings of tema and its congeners are transparently related. though sometimes languages show idiosyncratic individual developments: this is the case of Sp. "obstinacy" and Fr. "reason, cause", which appear not to be paralleled elsewhere, and have become obsolete. French and Italian use the word in the sense of "essay", and in French this has developed the even more specific meaning of "translation from one's native language into a foreign language". Treated most commonly as masculine in Romance, though there are some examples of feminine.