different between mould vs timbale
mould
English
Pronunciation
- (General American) IPA(key): /mo?ld/
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /m??ld/
- Rhymes: -??ld
Etymology 1
Via Middle English molde, moulde and Old French molde, from Latin modulus.
Noun
mould (countable and uncountable, plural moulds)
- (British spelling, Canadian spelling, Australian spelling) Alternative spelling of mold (“hollow form or matrix”)
Translations
Verb
mould (third-person singular simple present moulds, present participle moulding, simple past and past participle moulded)
- (British spelling, Canadian spelling, Australian spelling) Alternative spelling of mold (“to shape in a mould”)
Translations
Etymology 2
From Middle English mowlde, noun use and alteration of mowled, past participle of moulen, mawlen (“to grow moldy”), from Old Norse mygla (compare dialectal Danish mugle), from Proto-Germanic *mugl?n?, diminutive and denominative of *mukiz (“soft substance”) (compare Old Norse myki, mykr (“cow dung”)), from Proto-Indo-European *mewk- (“slick, soft”). More at muck and meek.
Noun
mould (countable and uncountable, plural moulds)
- (British spelling, Canadian spelling, Australian spelling) Alternative spelling of mold (“growth of tiny fungi”)
Translations
Verb
mould (third-person singular simple present moulds, present participle moulding, simple past and past participle moulded)
- (British spelling, Canadian spelling, Australian spelling) Alternative spelling of mold (“to cause to become mouldy”)
Translations
Etymology 3
From Old English molde. Cognate with Old High German molta, Old Norse mold and Gothic ???????????????????? (mulda).
Noun
mould (plural moulds)
- loose soil, esp when rich in organic matter
- (poetic) the earth
mould From the web:
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timbale
English
Etymology
From French timbale.
Noun
timbale (plural timbales)
- A drum-shaped mould used to cook food.
- An individual serving of food so cooked.
- A dish of poultry or fish pounded and mixed with egg white, cream, etc., poured into a mould.
Translations
Anagrams
- bimetal, limbate
French
Etymology
Alteration of tamballe (as though formed from cimbale + timbre), from Old Occitan tambala, from Arabic ?????? (?abl).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /t??.bal/
Noun
timbale f (plural timbales)
- (music) kettledrum; timpani
- (metal) cup, goblet
- (cooking) timbale (mould)
Further reading
- “timbale” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
timbale From the web:
- what timbales should i buy
- what timbales mean
- what is timbale in cooking
- what do timbales sound like
- what is timbales instrument
- what are timbales food
- what does timbale mean
- what are timbales made of
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