פּאַשטעט
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Yiddish
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]- פּאַסטעט (pastet)
Etymology
[edit]Borrowed from Belarusian паштэ́т (paštét), Polish pasztet and/or Russian паште́т (paštét), ultimately from German Pastete. Direct inheritance as a dialectal cognate to Pastete would have yielded a feminine gender.
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]פּאַשטעט • (pashtet) m, plural פּאַשטעטן (pashtetn)
Derived terms
[edit]- פּאַשטעט פֿון גענדזענער לעבער (pashtet fun gendzener leber, “pâté de foie gras”)
See also
[edit]- (pate, head): קאָפּ (kop)
References
[edit]- Justus van de Kamp et al., “פּאַשטעט” in Jiddisch-Nederlands Woordenboek [Yiddish-Dutch Dictionary], Amsterdam: Stichting Jiddische Lexicografie, 1987-present (ongoing). [1].
- Schaechter-Viswanath, Gitl, Glasser, Paul (2016) “pâté”, in Comprehensive English-Yiddish Dictionary, Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press, →ISBN
Categories:
- Yiddish terms borrowed from Belarusian
- Yiddish terms derived from Belarusian
- Yiddish terms borrowed from Polish
- Yiddish terms derived from Polish
- Yiddish terms borrowed from Russian
- Yiddish terms derived from Russian
- Yiddish terms derived from German
- Yiddish terms with IPA pronunciation
- Yiddish lemmas
- Yiddish nouns
- Yiddish masculine nouns
- yi:Foods