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פֿיסנאָגע

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

Yiddish

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Etymology

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From פֿוס (fus), from Old High German fuoz, + a Slavic reflex of Proto-Slavic *noga.[1]

Pronunciation

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IPA(key): /fɪsˈnɔɡə/

Noun

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פֿיסנאָגע (fisnoge)

  1. (dialectal, Northeastern) calves' foot aspic
    Synonyms: גאַלער (galer), גאַלערעטע (galerete), כאָלאָדעץ (kholodets), פּטשאַ (ptsha)

References

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  1. ^ Gil Marks (2010 November 17) Encyclopedia of Jewish Food, HMH, →ISBN:
    The whimsical name fisnoga from Lithuania and Latvia actually had a practical origin, as Litkvaks from the north of the country had difficulty pronouncing the sh sound and thus the word fishe (fish) and fis (foot) sounded the same; to differentiate the two homophones, the Slavic word for foot (noga) was added to the Teutonic word for foot (fis), and the term became fisnoga (literally "foot foot").