different between murgh vs chicken

murgh

English

Alternative forms

  • murg

Etymology

From Persian ???? (mor?).

Noun

murgh (uncountable)

  1. (Indian cookery) chicken
    • 1976, Chicago (volume 25, page 125)
      Our other entrée was murgh massalam ($3.50), half a chicken of fall-off-the-bone tenderness in a rich brown cream sauce garnished with a whole hard-boiled egg.
    • 2014, Laura Siciliano-Rosen, Delhi Food and Travel Guide
      But of those bold curries, butter chicken, or murgh makhani, is the richest of all.
    • 2015, Dominique Auzias, Jean-Paul Labourdette, Best of France 2016 Petit Futé
      As a starter, the murgh tikka are pieces of chicken breast marinated cooked in tandoor that can be prepared in various ways with various spices with crushed cashew nuts and cream, or spinach, spices and coriander.

murgh From the web:

  • what's murgh mean
  • what is murgh musallam
  • what does murgh mean
  • what is murgh in an indian restaurant
  • what is murgh makhani
  • what is murgh masala
  • what is murgh tikka masala
  • what does murgh mean in indian cooking


chicken

English

Wikispecies

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation, General American) enPR: ch?k'?n, IPA(key): /?t???k?n/
  • Rhymes: -?k?n, -?k?n
  • Hyphenation: chick?en

Etymology 1

From Middle English chiken (also as chike > English chick), from Old English ?icen, ?ycen (chicken), of uncertain origin. Possibly from Proto-West Germanic *kiuk?n (chicken), or alternatively from Proto-West Germanic *kukk?n, equivalent to cock +? -en. Compare North Frisian schückling (chicken), Saterland Frisian Sjuuken (chicken), Dutch kuiken (chick, chicken), German Low German Küken (chick), whence German Küken (chick), (elevated, obsolete) German Küchlein (chick) and Old Norse kjúklingr (chicken).

Noun

chicken (countable and uncountable, plural chickens)

  1. (countable) A domestic fowl, Gallus gallus, especially when young.
    • 1997, Beverley Randell, Clive Harper, Chickens, Nelson Thornes (?ISBN), page 8:
      Some chickens lay eggs almost every day. [] Chickens are kept for their meat, too.
  2. (uncountable) The meat from this bird eaten as food.
    • 1995, Jean Paré, Chicken, Etc., Company's Coming Publishing Limited (?ISBN), page 7:
      Before cooking chicken, or other poultry, rinse with cold water and pat dry with a paper towel.
  3. (archaic) The young of any bird; a chick.
  4. (countable, slang) A coward.
    • 2008, Lanakila Michael Achong, Haole Boy: The Adoption of Diversity, iUniverse (?ISBN), page 44:
      Usually, I had no problem approaching girls, but this one was different. I went home and berated myself for being such a chicken.
    • (More commonly used as an adjective with this sense; see below.)
  5. (countable, slang) A young or inexperienced person.
    • 1886, A[rthur] Conan Doyle, “The Lauriston Garden Mystery”, in A Study in Scarlet (Beeton's Christmas Annual; 28th season), London; New York, N.Y.: Ward Lock & Co., November 1887, OCLC 15800088; republished as A Study in Scarlet. A Detective Story, new edition, London: Ward, Lock, Bowden, and Co., 1892, OCLC 23246292, page 43:
      "This case will make a stir, sir," he remarked. "It beats anything I have seen, and I am no chicken."
  6. (countable, Polari) A young, attractive, slim man, usually having little body hair; compare chickenhawk.
  7. The game of dare.
    1. A confrontational game in which the participants move toward each other at high speed (usually in automobiles); the player who turns first to avoid colliding into the other is the chicken (that is, the loser).
  8. A simple dance in which the movements of a chicken are imitated.
Synonyms
  • (bird): biddy, chook (Australia, NZ)
  • (coward): see Thesaurus:coward
  • (young inexperienced person): spring chicken
  • (young, attractive, slim man): twink
Hyponyms
  • (bird): cock, cockerel, rooster (male), hen (female), chick (young), broiler (suitable as food)
Derived terms
Descendants
  • ? German: Chicken
  • ? Irish: sicín
  • ? Japanese: ??? (chikin)
  • ? Korean: ?? (chikin)
Translations
See also
  • egg
  • poultry
  • ????

Adjective

chicken (comparative more chicken, superlative most chicken)

  1. (informal) Cowardly.
    Synonyms: see Thesaurus:cowardly, Thesaurus:afraid
Derived terms
  • chicken out

Etymology 2

Shortening of chicken out.

Verb

chicken (third-person singular simple present chickens, present participle chickening, simple past and past participle chickened)

  1. (intransitive) To avoid a situation one is afraid of.

Etymology 3

From chick +? -en (plural ending).

Noun

chicken

  1. (Britain dialectal or obsolete) plural of chick

Further reading

  • chicken on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
  • chicken (food) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
  • chicken (game) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
  • chicken (gay slang) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
  • chicken (disambiguation) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

Anagrams

  • check in, check-in, checkin', in check

Scots

Etymology

From English chicken.

Noun

chicken (plural chickens)

  1. chicken

chicken From the web:

  • what chickens lay blue eggs
  • what chickens lay white eggs
  • what chickens lay green eggs
  • what chickens lay brown eggs
  • what chicken lays the most eggs
  • what chickens lay pink eggs
  • what chickens eat
  • what chicken lays black eggs
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