macaroni

suomi-englanti sanakirja

macaroni englannista suomeksi

  1. makaroni

  2. keikari

  1. makaroni

  2. Substantiivi

macaroni englanniksi

  1. A type of pasta in the form of short tubes, typically boiled and served in soup, with a sauce, or in melted cheese; a dish of this. (defdate)

  2. (hypo)

  3. 1778, Hannah Glasse, ''The Art of Cookery...'', new ed., p. 124:

  4. Take half a pound of small pipe-macaroni.
  5. (RQ:Landon Romance)

  6. Pasta, (n-g) thicker noodles, spaghetti. (defdate)

  7. (syn)

  8. {{quote-book|en|year=1673|author=John Ray|title=Observations...|page=405

  9. 1883, ''Encyclopaedia Britannica'', 9th ed., Vol. XV, Britannica, Ninth Edition/Macaroni|s.v.:

  10. MACARONI... is a preparation of wheat originally peculiar to Italy, in which country it is an article of food of national importance. The same substance in different forms is also known as vermicelli, pasta or Italian pastes, taglioni, fanti, &c.
  11. (synonym of). (defdate)

  12. {{quote-text|en|year=1611|author=John Florio|title=Queen Anna's New World of Words|section=s.v

  13. (RQ:Jonson Cynthia's Revels)

  14. A dandy or fop, (n-g) in the 18th century a young Englishman who had travelled in Europe and subsequently dressed and spoke in an ostentatiously affected Continental manner. (defdate)

  15. 1764 February 6, Horace Walpole, letter to the Earl of Hertford:

  16. ... the Maccaroni Club (which is composed of all the travelled young men who wear long curls and spying-glasses) ...
  17. 1764 May 27, Horace Walpole, letter to the Earl of Hertford:

  18. Lady Falkener's daughter is to be married to a young rich Mr. Crewe, a Macarone...
  19. {{quote-text|en|year=1770|month=June|title=Oxford Magazine|page=228

  20. 1773, Robert Hitchcock, ''The Macaroni'', Act I:

  21. I wanted you to be a man of spirit; your ambition was to appear a first-rate Macaroni; you are returned fully qualified, and determined, I see, to shew the world what a contemptible creature an English-man dwindles into, when he adopts the follies and vices of other nations.
  22. {{quote-text|en|year=1777|author=Richard Brinsley Sheridan|title=The School for Scandal|section=II.ii

  23. (RQ:Wilde Dorian Gray)

  24. {{quote-text|en|year=1997|author=Thomas Pynchon|title=Mason & Dixon

  25. A 19th-century quarter-dollar coin, (n-g) a full 2-real coin or a quarter clipping of an 8-real coin from America|Central or America. (defdate)

  26. {{quote-book|en|year=1808|author=John Stewart|title=An Account of Jamaica...|page=59

  27. (ellipsis of) (''chrysolophusTranslingual|Eudyptes chrysolophus''). (defdate)

  28. {{quote-journal|en|date=May 16 1955|journal=The Times|page=5

  29. 1845 December 15, Frances Anne Kemble, letter:

  30. Surely I shall always be able, go where I will, among frogs or maccaronis, to procure noir, or nero.
  31. (ellipsis of). (defdate)

  32. {{quote-book|en|year=1867|author=George Alfred Rogers|title=The Art of Wood Carving|page=12

  33. {{quote-book|en|year=1876|author=Robert Linlithgow Wallace|title=The Canary Book|page=165

  34. A mix of languages in macaronic verse. (defdate)

  35. {{quote-book|en|year=1884|author=James Edwin Thorold Rogers|title=Six Centuries of Work and Wages|volume=I|page=166

  36. Nonsense; meaningless talk.

  37. {{quote-book|en|year=1924|author=D. H. Lawrence; et al|title=The Boy in the Bush|page=46

  38. Chic, fashionable, stylish; in the manner of a macaroni.

  39. A macaroon.

  40. (quote-book)

  41. (l)

  42. (l)

  43. macaroni