miuca
Appearance
Old Galician-Portuguese
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Uncertain. Given the Asturian cognates (milu, meruca) and some current Galician (mioca, moca) and Portuguese forms (mioca), perhaps from *milo- + -oca, or *milokka, from a substrate language. The modern forms Portuguese minhoca and Galician miñoca are due to progressive nasalization, as minha, miña from Latin mea.
If related or derived from Proto-Celtic *mīlom (“animal”), then from Proto-Indo-European *(s)meh₁l- (“small animal”).
Noun
[edit]*miuca f (plural miucas)
- (Galicia, hapax) earthworm
- 1420, Álvaro Eans das Eiras, transl., Tratado de Albeitaria, translation of De Medicina Equorum by Giordano Ruffo, page 131:
- Para esto ual a çebolla assada pisada con miucas da terra et con as llesmez et con manteyga rretuda desuu, todo amasado et coyto et meixudo todo ataa que se tome espeso como jngento
- For this is valid roasted onion crushed with earthworms and with slugs and melted butter, all together, kneaded and cooked and stirred till is thick as an ointment
Usage notes
[edit]- Only attested in the plural.
Descendants
[edit]- Fala: miñoca
- Galician: miñoca, binoca, binocra, mañoca, mexoca, minoca, mioca, miocra, moca (dialectal forms), minhoca (reintegrationist)
- Portuguese: minhoca, menhoca, minoca, mioca
References
[edit]- Xavier Varela Barreiro, Xavier Gómez Guinovart (2006–2018) “miuca”, in Corpus Xelmírez - Corpus lingüístico da Galicia medieval (in Galician), Santiago de Compostela: Instituto da Lingua Galega
Categories:
- Old Galician-Portuguese terms with unknown etymologies
- Old Galician-Portuguese terms suffixed with -oca
- Old Galician-Portuguese terms derived from substrate languages
- Old Galician-Portuguese terms derived from Proto-Celtic
- Old Galician-Portuguese terms derived from Proto-Indo-European
- Old Galician-Portuguese lemmas
- Old Galician-Portuguese nouns
- Old Galician-Portuguese feminine nouns
- Galician Old Galician-Portuguese
- Old Galician-Portuguese hapax legomena
- Old Galician-Portuguese terms with quotations
- Old Galician-Portuguese terms derived from a pre-Roman substrate of Iberia
- roa-opt:Earthworms