culaccino
Italian
FWOTD – 17 December 2017
Etymology
From culaccio + -ino, derived from culo (“bottom”, literally “butt”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ku.latˈt͡ʃi.no/
- Rhymes: -ino
- Hyphenation: cu‧lac‧cì‧no
Noun
culaccino m (plural culaccini)
- the end of a salami, loaf of bread etc.
- 2016, Fabio Picchi, Papale Papale: Ricette che salvano l'anima [Papale Papale: Recipes that save your soul][1], 1st edition, Firenze: Giunti Editore, →ISBN:
- Prendete un culaccino di pane raffermo […]
- Take a bottom of stale bread […]
- the dregs in a glass, or the remaining part of a substance in a vessel
- a water ring, a mark left on a surface by the bottom of a wet glass or vessel (of tea, water, etc.)
Descendants
- → Indonesian: kulacino