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frikadelle

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
See also: Frikadelle

English

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A freshly made batch of frikadeller

Alternative forms

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Etymology

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From the Danish frikadelle and its etymon, the German Frikadelle.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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frikadelle (plural frikadeller or frikadellen or (rare) frikadelles)

  1. (food) An oblate-spheroid meatball of North European origin, eaten hot or cold, and typically consisting of: minced pork or beef/veal (or, commonly, a blend of these meats); chopped onions; eggs; milk or water; breadcrumbs, oatmeal, or flour; salt; and pepper.
    • 1994, Pace, Pace-Maker (Pty.) Limited, page 64:
      1. Mix ingredients for frikadelles together. 2. Make 6-8 frikadelles. 3. Place in oven dish with lid, or in a frying pan. 4. Mix ingredients for sauce, and pour over frikadelles.
    • 2015, Alicia Tobin, Chris Gursche, “Celeriac Soup with Vegetarian Frikadelles”, in Keto·Genesis: 30 Well Fed Days to a New, Leaner & Healthier You, New Westminster, B.C.: Foresight Publishing, →ISBN, page 89:
      Add 5 frikadelles per bowl of soup, and garnish with green onions.
    • 2017, Elizabeth Rezende, Anne Walbom, St. Thomas & St. John – Historic Photos, [Copenhagen]: Danish West Indian Society, →ISBN, page 61:
      In addition, the store sold fancy imported goods such as frikadelles, Norwegian fish balls and specialty sausages as well as liquors.
    • 2023, Isabel Waidner, Corey Fah Does Social Mobility, Hamish Hamilton, page 31:
      There it was, the frikadelle, inside a sliced sesame bun, sunk in on itself by that point.

Translations

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Further reading

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Danish

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Frikadeller

Etymology

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From German Frikadelle (meatball), borrowed via Dutch frikadel from French fricandeau (a dish with sliced veal). Alternatively, from Italian frittella (fritter, flapjack).

Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): /frekədɛlə/, [fʁæɡ̊əˈd̥ɛlə] or IPA(key): /frikadɛlə/, [fʁiɡ̊aˈd̥ɛlə]

Noun

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frikadelle c (singular definite frikadellen, plural indefinite frikadeller)

  1. meatball (traditionally made with pork)
  2. (figuratively) doughnut, cinnamon bun (hair style)
  3. (figuratively) ham (actor with an exaggerating style)
    • 2014, Gregers Dirkinck-Holmfeld, Frejlif: Ekstra Bladets udtæmmelige redaktør, Politikens Forlag, →ISBN:
      Men Frejlif nævner en enkelt af sine egne anmeldelser, hvor han “fornærmede den mest fremragende af teatrets skuespillere, en ældre frikadelle, der ikke var sen til at hævne sig.”
      But Frejlif mentions one of his own reviews, in which he “insulted the most brilliant of the theatre's actors, an elderly ham, who was not late to take revenge.”
    • 1896, Otto Jespersen, Kristoffer Nyrop, Dania:
      Hvis nogen ved ukunstneriske Midler bejler til Galleriets Bifald, bliver han en Galleriskuespiller; er han simpel og har en daarlig Udtale, men alligevel gør nogen Lykke, kaldes han, som Skuespiller for den tarvelige Borgerklasse, en Frikadelleskuespiller eller forkortet alene en Frikadelle.
      If anyone woos the applause of the gallery by unartistic means, he becomes a gallery-actor; if he is simple and has poor enunciation, but still has some success, he is called, as actor for the mean citizenry, a ham-actor or, abbreviated, simply a ham.

Declension

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Synonyms

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See also

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