different between broiled vs carbonado
broiled
English
Verb
broiled
- simple past tense and past participle of broil
broiled From the web:
- what broiled means
- what's broiled chicken
- what's broiled fish
- what's broiled salmon
- what's broiled food
- what does broiled mean in cooking
- what is broiled shrimp
- what is broiled steak
carbonado
English
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?k??b??ne?d??/, /-?n??-/
- (General American) IPA(key): /?k??b??ne?do?/
- Hyphenation: car?bon?a?do
Etymology 1
The noun is derived from Spanish carbonada (“carbonized”) (from carbonar (“to carbonize”)) + -ado (suffix forming past participles of regular verbs ending in -ar). Carbonada appears to have been modelled after Italian carbonata (“coal pile; stew of beef in red wine”), from carbone (“coal; charcoal”) (from Latin carb? (“coal; charcoal”), from Proto-Indo-European *ker- (“to burn”)) + -ata.
The verb is derived from the noun.
Noun
carbonado (plural carbonados or carbonadoes)
- (cooking, dated) Meat or fish that has been scored and broiled.
- Synonym: carbonade
Translations
Verb
carbonado (third-person singular simple present carbonados, present participle carbonadoing, simple past and past participle carbonadoed)
- (transitive, dated, also figuratively) To make a carbonado of; to score and broil.
- (transitive, obsolete) To cut or hack, as in combat.
- Synonym: slash
Translations
Etymology 2
Borrowed from Portuguese carbonado (“carbonized”), probably from carbono (“carbon”) (currently only attested later than carbonado) + -ado (suffix forming adjectives from nouns meaning ‘something or someone who has suffered the action’). Carbono is borrowed from French carbone (“carbon”), from Latin carb? (“coal; charcoal”); for further derivation, see etymology 1.
Noun
carbonado (plural carbonados or carbonadoes)
- (mineralogy) A dark, non-transparent, impure form of polycrystalline diamond (also containing graphite and amorphous carbon) used in drilling.
- Synonym: black diamond
Coordinate terms
- ballas
- boart, bort
Translations
References
Further reading
- carbonado (diamond) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- carbonado (disambiguation) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- David Barthelmy (1997–2021) , “Carbonado”, in Webmineral Mineralogy Database
- “carbonado”, in Mindat.org?[1], Hudson Institute of Mineralogy, 2000–2021.
Italian
Etymology
carbo- +?
Noun
carbonado m (plural carbonadi)
- carbonado (black diamond)
Spanish
Verb
carbonado
- Masculine singular past participle of carbonar.
carbonado From the web:
- what carbonado diamond
- carbonado what does it mean
- carbonado meaning
- what is carbonado worth
- what does carbonado mean in spanish
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