יויך
Yiddish
Etymology
Borrowed from Middle Low German juche, ultimately from Proto-Slavic *jūxà, from Proto-Balto-Slavic *jáušāˀ, from Proto-Indo-European *yowHs-ó-s, from *yúHs. Cognate to German Jauche. Likely semantically influenced by Ukrainian юха́ (juxá, “soup”). Compare also Serbo-Croatian, Slovene juha (“soup”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /jɔɪ̯χ/
Noun
יויך • (yoykh) f, plural יויכן (yoykhn), diminutive יײַכל (yaykhl)
Derived terms
- בראָטיויך (brotyoykh, “gravy”)
- גאָלדענע יויך (goldene yoykh)
- הינדליויך (hindlyoykh), הינערנע יויך (hinerne yoykh)
- קדמון־יױך (kadmen-yoykh, “primordial soup”)
- קאַטשענע יויך (katshene yoykh, “duck soup”)
- כאַפּן די לאָקשן פֿאַר דער יויך (khapn di lokshn far der yoykh, “to put the cart before the horse”)
- מיט דער יויך (mit der yoykh, “au jus”)
- יויכציבעלע f (yoykhtsibele), יויכציבעלקע f (yoykhtsibelke, “soup onion”)
References
- Schaechter-Viswanath, Gitl, Glasser, Paul (2016) “broth”, in Comprehensive English-Yiddish Dictionary, Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press, →ISBN
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