-
mentioned as a
distinct food,
which the
Romans named iecur ficatum;
iecur means liver: and
ficatum derives from ficus,
meaning fig in Latin. The
emperor Elagabalus...
- than to
classical Latin, with
later recipes using Vulgar Latin (such as
ficatum, bullire)
added to
earlier recipes using classical Latin (such as iecur...
-
otijemna "barge-pole" < ANTEMNA; òvrata "snapper" < AURATA; pìkat "liver" <
FICATUM; prȉgati "to roast" < FRIGERE; rèkesa "low tide" < RECESSA; trȁkta "drag-net"...
- not from the
Latin anatomical term, jecur, but from the
culinary term
ficatum,
literally "stuffed with figs",
referring to the
livers of
geese that had...
-
filha fille fīlia
daughter ficåt
hicat ficat ****ato hígado fígado foie
fīcātum liver fi hire ire a fi
essere ser ser être fuī/esse/sum to be fľer heru...
- f- → h- fabulāri, facere, faciendam, factum, faminem, farīnam, fēminam,
fīcatum, fīlium, folia, fōrmōsum, fūmum, fungum,
furcam fablar, fazer, fazienda...
- not from the
Latin anatomical term, jecur, but from the
culinary term
ficatum,
literally "stuffed with figs,"
referring to the
livers of
geese that had...
- 'yes'
iecore liver.ABL PR. */jeˈkʷarʲa/ Pt.
iguaria 'delicacies'
ficato CL
ficatum 'foie gras', lit. 'fig-fattened liver',
calqued from Gr**** συκωτόν. PR...