berbere
English
Etymology
From Amharic በርበሬ (bärbäre) and/or Tigrinya በርበረ (bärbärä).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /bɛɚˈbɛɚ.ɹeɪ/,[1] /bɛɚ.bɛɚ.ɹi/ or IPA(key): /bɝˈbɝ.ɹeɪ/, /bɝˈbɝ.ɹi/, /bɝˈbɝ.ɹə/[2]
Audio (US): (file)
Noun
berbere (uncountable)
- A spice mixture, usually consisting of chili peppers, garlic, ginger, basil, and other spices, which is used in Ethiopian and Eritrean cuisine.
- 1939, Ferdinando Quaranta di San Severino, Ethiopia, an empire in the making, page 16:
- Food in Ethiopia is always seasoned with berberè, a kind of pimiento.
- 1958, The Journal of Tropical Pediatrics and African Child Health:
- Wat is a sauce composed of legumes, including horsebeans, chickpeas, kidneybeans, and lentils pounded to a flour, and mixed with spices. First berbere (red pepper) is dried and ground, then mixed with onions and butter, thus forming a thick cream.
References
Further reading
Italian
Adjective
berbere
- feminine plural of berbero
Norwegian Bokmål
Noun
berbere m
- indefinite plural of berber
Portuguese
Etymology
From Arabic بَرْبَرِيّ (barbariyy, “Berber”), probably from Ancient Greek βᾰ́ρβᾰρος (bắrbăros, “foreign”). Doublet of bárbaro and, possibly, of bravo / brabo.
Pronunciation
- (Brazil) IPA(key): /beʁˈbɛ.ɾi/ [beɦˈbɛ.ɾi]
- (São Paulo) IPA(key): /beɾˈbɛ.ɾi/
- (Rio de Janeiro) IPA(key): /beʁˈbɛ.ɾi/
- (Southern Brazil) IPA(key): /beɻˈbɛ.ɾe/
- (Portugal) IPA(key): /bɨɾˈbɛ.ɾɨ/ [bɨɾˈβɛ.ɾɨ]
Noun
berbere m or f by sense (plural berberes)
- Berber (member of northwest African ethnic group)
Noun
berbere m (uncountable)
- Berber (a group of closely related languages)