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English-Thai Dictionary

macaroni

N มะกะโรนี  pasta spaghetti mak-ka-ra-ne

 

macaronic

A ที่ มี ลักษณะ ของ คำ ละติน ที่ ผสม กับ คำ ที่ ไม่ใช่ ละติน  ที่ผ สมกัน 

 

Webster's 1828 Dictionary

MACARONI

n.[Gr. happy. ] 1. A kind of biscuit made of flour, eggs, sugar and almonds, and dressed with butter and spices.
2. A sort of droll or fool, and hence, a fop; a fribble; a finical fellow.

 

MACARONIC

a.Pertaining to or like a macaroni; empty; trifling; vain; affected. 1. Consisting of a mixture or jumble of ill formed or ill connected words.

 

MACARONIC

n.A kind of burlesque poetry, in which native words are made to end in Latin terminations, or Latin words are modernized.

 

Webster's 1913 Dictionary

MACARONI

Mac `a *ro "ni, n.; pl. Macaronis (#), or Macaronies. [Prov. It. macaroni, It. maccheroni, fr. Gr. happiness, later, a funeral feast, fr. blessed, happy. Prob. so called because eaten at such feasts in honor of the dead; cf. Gr. blessed, i. e., dead. Cf. Macaroon. ]

 

1. Long slender tubes made of a paste chiefly of wheat flour, and used as an article of food; Italian or Genoese paste.

 

A paste similarly prepared is largely used as food in Persia, India, and China, but is not commonly made tubular like the Italian macaroni. Balfour (Cyc. of India ).

 

2. A medley; something droll or extravagant.

 

3. A sort of droll or fool. [Obs. ] Addison.

 

4. A finical person; a fop; -- applied especially to English fops of about 1775. Goldsmith.

 

5. pl. (U. S. Hist. ) The designation of a body of Maryland soldiers in the Revolutionary War, distinguished by a rich uniform. W. Irving.

 

MACARONIAN; MACARONIC

Mac `a *ro "ni *an, Mac `a *ron "ic, a. [Cf. It. maccheronico, F.macaronique.]

 

1. Pertaining to, or like, macaroni (originally a dish of mixed food ); hence, mixed; confused; jumbled.

 

2. Of or pertaining to the burlesque composition called macaronic; as, macaronic poetry.

 

MACARONIC

MACARONIC Mac `a *ron "ic, n.

 

1. A heap of thing confusedly mixed together; a jumble.

 

2. A kind of burlesque composition, in which the vernacular words of one or more modern languages are intermixed with genuine Latin words, and with hybrid formed by adding Latin terminations to other roots.

 

New American Oxford Dictionary

Macaronesia

Mac a ro ne sia |ˌmakərəˈnēZHə ˌmækərəˈniʒə |Botany a phytogeographical region comprising the Azores, Madeira, Canary Islands, and Cape Verde Islands in the eastern North Atlantic. DERIVATIVES Mac a ro ne sian |-ˈnēZHēən |adjective ORIGIN from Greek makarōn nēsoi islands of the Blessed (mythical islands later associated with the Canaries ).

 

macaroni

mac a ro ni |ˌmakəˈrōnē ˌmækəˈroʊni | noun ( pl. macaronies ) 1 a variety of pasta formed in narrow tubes. 2 an 18th -century British dandy affecting Continental fashions. ORIGIN late 16th cent.: from Italian maccaroni (now usually spelled maccheroni ), plural of maccarone, from late Greek makaria food made from barley.

 

macaronic

mac a ron ic |ˌmakəˈränik ˌmækəˈrɑnɪk | adjective denoting language, esp. burlesque verse, containing words or inflections from one language introduced into the context of another. noun (usu. macaronics ) macaronic verse, esp. that which mixes the vernacular with Latin. ORIGIN early 17th cent. (in the sense characteristic of a jumble or medley ): from modern Latin macaronicus, from obsolete Italian macaronico, a humorous formation from macaroni (see macaroni ).

 

macaroni cheese

maca |roni cheese noun [ mass noun ] Brit. a savoury dish of macaroni in a cheese sauce.

 

macaroni penguin

mac a ro ni pen guin noun a penguin with an orange crest, breeding on islands in the Antarctic. [Eudyptes chrysolophus, family Spheniscidae. ] ORIGIN early 19th cent.: so named because the orange crest was thought to resemble the hairstyle of dandies known as macaronies (see macaroni ).

 

Oxford Dictionary

Macaronesia

Macaronesia |ˌmakərə (ʊ )ˈniːzɪə |Botany a phytogeographical region comprising the Azores, Madeira, the Canary Islands, and the Cape Verde Islands in the eastern North Atlantic. DERIVATIVES Macaronesian adjective ORIGIN from Greek makarōn nēsoi islands of the Blessed (mythical islands later associated with the Canaries ).

 

macaroni

macaroni |ˌmakəˈrəʊni | noun ( pl. macaronies ) 1 [ mass noun ] pasta in the shape of narrow tubes. 2 an 18th -century British dandy who imitated continental fashions. ORIGIN early 16th cent.: from Italian maccaroni (now usually spelled maccheroni ), plural of maccarone, from late Greek makaria food made from barley .

 

macaronic

macaronic |ˌmakəˈrɒnɪk | adjective denoting language, especially burlesque verse, containing words or inflections from one language introduced into the context of another. noun (macaronics ) macaronic verse, especially that which mixes the vernacular with Latin. ORIGIN early 17th cent. (in the sense characteristic of a jumble or medley ): from modern Latin macaronicus, from obsolete Italian macaronico, a humorous formation from macaroni (see macaroni ).

 

macaroni cheese

maca |roni cheese noun [ mass noun ] Brit. a savoury dish of macaroni in a cheese sauce.

 

macaroni penguin

maca |roni pen |guin noun a penguin with an orange crest, breeding on islands in the Antarctic. Eudyptes chrysolophus, family Spheniscidae. ORIGIN early 19th cent.: so named because the orange crest was thought to resemble the hairstyle of dandies known as macaronies (see macaroni ).

 

French Dictionary

macaron

macaron n. m. nom masculin 1 Petit gâteau sec. : Des macarons et un peu de thé? 2 Insigne généralement de forme ronde. : Des macarons amusants. Note Orthographique macar on.

 

macaroni

macaroni n. m. (pl. macaronis ) nom masculin Pâte alimentaire en forme de tube. : Des macaronis savoureux, du macaroni au gratin. Note Technique Certains auteurs conservent le pluriel italien du mot en i; il paraît plus logique d ’intégrer le mot au français et de mettre un s au pluriel.

 

Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary

macaroni

mac a ro ni /mæ̀kəróʊni /〖<イタリア 名詞 U マカロニ .