Talk:byssus

Moving from the WP-en article:

The English term byssus or bissus (plural byssuses or byssi) originated in John Trevisa's translation (1398) of Bartholomeus Anglicus's Latin On the Properties of Things (1240), referring to finest white flax from Egypt. From originally meaning "fine linen", the semantics of byssus gradually expanded.

The etymology of byssus, according to the OED2, began with Biblical Hebrew būts or butz בוץ meaning "a fibre or fabric distinguished for its whiteness", cognate with Aramaic ܒܘܫ bus and Arabic باض bāḍa "to be white". This Hebrew term was translated as Latin byssus and Greek βύσσος "a fine yellowish flax, and the linen made from it, but in later writers taken for cotton, also silk, which was supposed to be a kind of cotton".

The OED2 lists five meanings of byssus in historical order (with dates of earliest references). Note that "†" denotes obsolete meanings. Excluding the botanical meaning (4) "rhizomorphs or grouped hyphae of certain fungi that roughly resemble a bivalve shell" and the obsolete (2) "fungoid filament" and (5) "asbestos", byssus refers to (1) "a rare fabric produced in ancient Mediterranean cultures" which is manufactured from (3) "a thread-like mollusc filament".
 * 1. "An exceedingly fine and valuable textile fibre and fabric known to the ancients; apparently the word was used, or misused, of various substances, linen, cotton, and silk, but it denoted properly (as shown by recent microscopic examination of mummy-cloths, which according to Herodotus were made of βύσσος) a kind of flax, and hence is appropriately translated in the English Bible 'fine linen'." (1398)
 * †2. "A name formerly given to filamentous fungoid growths of different kinds, which are now more accurately classified. Obs." (1753)
 * 3. "Zool. The tuft of fine silky filaments by which molluscs of the genus Pinna and various mussels attach themselves to the surface of rocks; it is secreted by the byssus-gland in the foot. "These filaments have been spun, and made into small articles of apparel. Their colour  ranges from  golden yellow to rich brown; they also are very durable.  The fabric is so fine that a pair of stockings may be put in an ordinary-sized snuff-box." [William Beck's 1886 The Draper's Dictionary]. (1836)
 * 4. "Bot. "The thread-like stipe of some fungi." (1866)
 * †5. "A name formerly given to asbestos." (1864)