dough-kneader

dough-kneader
тестомесачка;

English-Bulgarian dictionary. 2013.

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  • kneader — noun A person who, or machine that kneads dough …   Wiktionary

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  • dheigh- — To form, build. Oldest form *dheig̑h , becoming *dheigh in centum languages. Derivatives include dairy, lady, dough, and paradise. 1. dairy, from Old English dǣge, bread kneader, from Germanic *daigjōn …   Universalium

  • loaf — Ⅰ. loaf1 (lōf) n. pl. loaves (lōvz) 1) A shaped mass of bread baked in one piece. 2) A shaped, usually rounded or oblong, mass of food: »veal loaf. ╂ [Middle English lof, from Old English hlāf.] Word History: Loaf, lord, and …   Word Histories

  • lady — ladyhood, n. ladyish, adj. ladyishly, adv. ladyishness, n. ladyless, adj. /lay dee/, n., pl. ladies, adj. n. 1. a woman who is refined, polite, and well spoken: She may be poor and have little education, but she s a real lady. 2. a woman of high… …   Universalium

  • dairy — noun (plural dairies) Usage: often attributive Etymology: Middle English deyerie, from deye dairymaid, from Old English dǣge kneader of bread; akin to Old English dāg dough more at dough Date: 14th century 1. a room …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • dairy — [13] Etymologically, a dairy is a place where a female kneader of bread works. The term for such an operative in Old English was dǣge, which came from the same Indo European base (*dheigh ) as produced dough and the second syllable of lady. In… …   The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • lady — [OE] Originally, the term lady denoted a ‘kneader of bread’. It comes from Old English hloefdige, a compound formed from hlǣf ‘bread’ (ancestor of modern English loaf) and an element *dig ‘knead’ (related to English dough). It is a measure of the …   The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • dey — {{11}}dey (1) O.E. dæge female servant, housekeeper, maid, from P.Gmc. *daigjon (Cf. O.N. deigja maid, female servant, Swed. deja dairymaid ), from PIE *dheigh to form, build (see DOUGH (Cf. dough)). Now obsolete (though OED says, Still in living …   Etymology dictionary

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