different between french vs chaucer
french
English
Etymology
From Middle English French, Frensch, Frensh, from Old English frencisc (“of the Franks, Frankish, French”), from Franca (“a Frank”). Compare Old High German Franko (“a Frank”), akin to Old English franca (“javelin, spear”), from the use of such weapons by the Franks.
Pronunciation
- (UK, US) enPR: fr?nch, IPA(key): /f??nt??/, [f???n?t??]
- Rhymes: -?nt?
Verb
french (third-person singular simple present frenches, present participle frenching, simple past and past participle frenched)
- (transitive) To prepare food by cutting it into strips.
- (transitive) To kiss (another person) while inserting one’s tongue into the other person's mouth.
- (intransitive) To kiss in this manner.
- (cooking) To French trim; to stylishly expose bone by removing the fat and meat covering it (as done to a rack of lamb or bone-in rib-eye steak).
Synonyms
- (to kiss while inserting tongue): French kiss, French
Derived terms
- frenched
Translations
See also
- French
- julienne
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chaucer
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