different between bread vs tandoor

bread

English

Wikibooks

Pronunciation

  • (General Australian) enPR: br?d, IPA(key): /b??d/, /b?e?d/
  • (UK, US) enPR: br?d, IPA(key): /b??d/
  • Rhymes: -?d
  • Homophone: bred

Etymology 1

From Middle English bred, breed, from Old English br?ad (fragment, bit, morsel, crumb", also "bread), from Proto-Germanic *braud? (cooked food, leavened bread), from Proto-Indo-European *b?erw-, *b?rew- (to boil, seethe) (see brew). Alternatively, from Proto-Germanic *braudaz, *brauþaz (broken piece, fragment), from Proto-Indo-European *b?era- (to split, beat, hew, struggle) (see brittle). Perhaps a conflation of the two.

Cognate with Scots breid (bread), Saterland Frisian Brad (bread), West Frisian brea (bread), Dutch brood (bread), German Brot (bread), Danish and Norwegian brød (bread), Swedish bröd (bread), Icelandic brauð (bread), Albanian brydh (I make crumbly, friable, soft), Latin frustum (crumb).

Eclipsed non-native Middle English payn (bread), borrowed from Old French pain (bread).

Noun

bread (countable and uncountable, plural breads)

  1. (uncountable) A foodstuff made by baking dough made from cereals.
  2. (countable) Any variety of bread.
  3. (slang, US) Money.
  4. Food; sustenance; support of life, in general.
Usage notes
  • loaf, slice, piece, hunk are some of the words used to count bread.
Synonyms
  • (slang: money): dough, folding stuff, lolly, paper, spondulicks, wonga
Hyponyms
Derived terms
Descendants
  • Sranan Tongo: brede
  • ? Fiji Hindi: bareed
Translations

Verb

bread (third-person singular simple present breads, present participle breading, simple past and past participle breaded)

  1. (transitive) to coat with breadcrumbs
Derived terms
  • breaded (adjective)
  • breading (noun)
Translations

See also

  • loaf

Etymology 2

From Middle English brede, from Old English br?du (breadth, width, extent), from Proto-Germanic *braid?? (breadth). Cognate with Scots brede, breid (breadth), Dutch breedte (breadth), German Breite (breadth), Swedish bredd (breadth), Icelandic breidd (breadth).

Noun

bread (plural breads)

  1. (obsolete or Britain dialectal, Scotland) Breadth.
Derived terms
  • waybread

Etymology 3

From Middle English breden, from Old English br?dan (to make broad, extend, spread, stretch out; be extended, rise, grow), from Proto-Germanic *braidijan? (to make broad, broaden).

Verb

bread (third-person singular simple present breads, present participle breading, simple past and past participle breaded)

  1. (transitive, dialectal) To make broad; spread.

References

Etymology 4

Variant of braid, from Middle English breden, from Old English br?dan, bre?dan (to braid).

Alternative forms

  • breathe, brede

Verb

bread (third-person singular simple present breads, present participle breading, simple past and past participle breaded)

  1. (transitive) To form in meshes; net.

Noun

bread (plural breads)

  1. A piece of embroidery; a braid.

Anagrams

  • Bader, Beard, Breda, Debar, Debra, arbed, ardeb, bared, beard, debar

Old English

Alternative forms

  • br?od

Etymology

From Proto-Germanic *braud?, whence also Old Frisian br?d (West Frisian brea), Old Saxon br?d (German Low German Broot, Brot), Dutch brood, Old High German br?t (German Brot), Old Norse brauð and Icelandic brauð (Swedish bröd).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /bræ???d/

Noun

br?ad n (nominative plural br?adru) (rare, chiefly Anglian)

  1. bit, piece, morsel, crumb
  2. bread (foodstuff)

Declension

Synonyms

  • (bread): hl?f

Derived terms

  • b?obr?ad
  • picgbr?ad

Descendants

  • Middle English: bred, brede, breed, brid, bread, bræd
    • English: bread
      • Sranan Tongo: brede
      • ? Fiji Hindi: bareed
    • Scots: breid
    • Yola: breed

Spanish

Verb

bread

  1. (Spain) Informal second-person plural (vosotros or vosotras) affirmative imperative form of brear.

bread From the web:

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tandoor

English

Etymology

From Hindustani ?????? (tand?r) / ?????? (tand?r), from Persian ????? (tan?r), from Middle Persian [script needed] (tnwl /tan?r/, oven), ultimately from Akkadian ???????? (tin?ru), all meaning (clay) oven. According to the Dehkhoda Dictionary, the Akkadian word consists of the parts tin meaning "mud" and nuro/nura meaning "fire" and is mentioned as early as in the Akkadian Epic of Gilgamesh, c.f. also Avestan tanûra and Pahlavi tanûr. Doublet of athanor.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /tæn?d??(?)/, /t??n?d??(?)/
  • Rhymes: -??(?)

Noun

tandoor (plural tandoors)

  1. A cylindrical clay oven used, in the cuisine of the Caucasus, Middle East, and Indian subcontinent, to make flat bread, or to cook meat.
    • 2001, Martin Hughes, World Food: India (Lonely Planet), page 53
      You can cook naan in a normal oven, but the results will inevitably disappoint; even Indians generally wait to savour them in restaurants, as very few homes are equipped with a tandoor.

Related terms

  • tandoori

Translations

Anagrams

  • donator, odorant, tornado

Portuguese

Noun

tandoor m (plural tandoors)

  1. tandoor (cylindrical clay oven used in Indian cuisine)

Spanish

Noun

tandoor m (plural tandoor)

  1. tandoor

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  • what tandoor is called in english
  • what's tandoori paste
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