different between board vs panela

board

English

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) enPR: bôd, IPA(key): /b??d/
  • (General American) enPR: bôrd, IPA(key): /b??d/
  • (rhotic, without the horsehoarse merger) enPR: b?rd, IPA(key): /bo(?)?d/
  • (non-rhotic, without the horsehoarse merger) enPR: b??d, IPA(key): /bo?d/
  • Rhymes: -??(?)d
  • Homophone: bored; baud, bawd (nonrhotic accents with the horse–hoarse merger)

Etymology 1

From Middle English bord, from Old English bord (board; plank; table; shield; deck; ship; boundary), from Proto-West Germanic *bord, from Proto-Germanic *burd? (board; plank; table), from Proto-Indo-European *b?erd?- (to cut).

Noun

board (countable and uncountable, plural boards)

  1. A relatively long, wide and thin piece of any material, usually wood or similar, often for use in construction or furniture-making.
  2. A device (e.g., switchboard) containing electrical switches and other controls and designed to control lights, sound, telephone connections, etc.
  3. A flat surface with markings for playing a board game.
    Each player starts the game with four counters on the board.
  4. Short for blackboard, whiteboard, chessboard, surfboard, circuit board, message board (on the Internet), etc.
  5. A committee that manages the business of an organization, e.g., a board of directors.
  6. (uncountable) Regular meals or the amount paid for them in a place of lodging.
  7. (nautical) The side of a ship.
    • Now board to board the rival vessels row.
  8. (nautical) The distance a sailing vessel runs between tacks when working to windward.
  9. (ice hockey, often in the plural) The wall that surrounds an ice hockey rink.
  10. (archaic) A long, narrow table, like that used in a medieval dining hall.
  11. Paper made thick and stiff like a board, for book covers, etc.; pasteboard.
    to bind a book in boards
  12. (video games) A level or stage having a particular layout.
    • 2004, Dan Whitehead, Martyn Carroll, Shaun Bebbington, Future Shocks (in Your Sinclair issue 94)
      The object of the game is to move the smiley face over the preset board, in doing so removing the green squares and ending up at the exit []
  13. (bridge) A container for holding pre-dealt cards that is used to allow multiple sets of players to play the same cards.
Hyponyms
Derived terms
Related terms
Descendants
  • ? Japanese: ??? (b?do)
Translations
See also
  • batten
  • beam
  • lath
  • plank
  • pole
  • slab
  • veneer

Verb

board (third-person singular simple present boards, present participle boarding, simple past and past participle boarded)

  1. (transitive) To step or climb onto or otherwise enter a ship, aircraft, train or other conveyance.
    • 1862, Benjamin J. Totten, Naval Text-Book, and Dictionary, for the use of the Midshipmen of the U.S. Navy
      You board an enemy to capture her, and a stranger to receive news or make a communication.
    Antonyms: alight, disembark
  2. (transitive) To provide someone with meals and lodging, usually in exchange for money.
    to board one's horse at a livery stable
  3. (transitive) To receive meals and lodging in exchange for money.
    • February 8, 1712, Charity Frost, The Spectator No. 296 (letter to the editor)
      We are several of us, gentlemen and ladies, who board in the same house,
  4. (transitive, nautical) To capture an enemy ship by going alongside and grappling her, then invading her with a boarding party
  5. (intransitive) To obtain meals, or meals and lodgings, statedly for compensation
  6. (transitive, now rare) To approach (someone); to make advances to, accost.
    • 1590, Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene, II.iv:
      Ere long with like againe he boorded mee, / Saying, he now had boulted all the floure []
  7. To cover with boards or boarding.
    to board a house
    • the boarded hovel
  8. To hit (someone) with a wooden board.
  9. (transitive) To write something on a board, especially a blackboard or whiteboard.
Translations

Etymology 2

From backboard

Noun

board (plural boards)

  1. (basketball, informal) A rebound.
Translations

Anagrams

  • B road, Bardo, Borda, Broad, Broad., Broda, Dobra, abord, adorb, bardo, broad, dobra

board From the web:

  • what board game
  • what boarding school
  • what board size should i get
  • what board game should i play
  • what boards is scott gottlieb on
  • what board games are worth money
  • what board game is the oldest
  • what board to use for charcuterie board


panela

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Spanish panela.

Noun

panela (uncountable)

  1. An unrefined sugar product typical of Central and South America, which is basically a solid piece of sucrose and fructose obtained from the boiling and evaporation of sugarcane.

Translations

Anagrams

  • Alpena, apneal, pænal

Galician

Etymology

From Old Galician / Old Portuguese, from Vulgar Latin *pannella, from Vulgar Latin panna (pan), from the same origin that English pan.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /pa?n?la?/

Noun

panela f (plural panelas)

  1. pan
  2. frying pan
    Synonyms: tixola, sartaña
  3. a low basket

Related terms

  • Panela
  • penico

References

  • “panela” in Dicionario de Dicionarios do galego medieval, SLI - ILGA 2006-2012.
  • “panela” in Xavier Varela Barreiro & Xavier Gómez Guinovart: Corpus Xelmírez - Corpus lingüístico da Galicia medieval. SLI / Grupo TALG / ILG, 2006-2016.
  • “panela” in Dicionario de Dicionarios da lingua galega, SLI - ILGA 2006-2013.
  • “panela” in Tesouro informatizado da lingua galega. Santiago: ILG.
  • “panela” in Álvarez, Rosario (coord.): Tesouro do léxico patrimonial galego e portugués, Santiago de Compostela: Instituto da Lingua Galega.

Norwegian Bokmål

Alternative forms

  • panelene

Noun

panela n

  1. definite plural of panel

Norwegian Nynorsk

Noun

panela n

  1. definite plural of panel

Portuguese

Alternative forms

  • panella (obsolete)

Etymology

From Old Portuguese panela, panella, from Vulgar Latin *pannella, diminutive of the word panna (frying pan), from patina, from Ancient Greek ?????? (patán?).

Pronunciation

  • (Portugal) IPA(key): /p?.?n?.l?/
  • (Brazil) IPA(key): /p?.?n?.l?/, [p??.?n??.l??]

Noun

panela f (plural panelas)

  1. cooking pot
  2. cooking pan

Coordinate terms

  • tacho
  • testo

Further reading

  • panela on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

Spanish

Etymology

From pan.

Noun

panela f (plural panelas)

  1. panela (solid piece of unrefined sugar)
    Synonyms: atado dulce, chancaca, empanizao, papelón, piloncillo, panocha, raspadura, rapadura

Derived terms

  • aguapanela

Descendants

  • ? English: panela
  • ? Tataltepec Chatino: parelya

Further reading

  • “panela” in Diccionario de la lengua española, Vigésima tercera edición, Real Academia Española, 2014.

panela From the web:

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  • what's panela sugar
  • what panela mean in spanish
  • panela what does it mean
  • what is panela cheese used for
  • what is panela in english
  • what is panela cheese in english
  • what is panela used for
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