komer
See also: Komer
Ladino
Alternative forms
- comer, kumer
Etymology
Inherited from Old Spanish comer (“to eat”), from Vulgar Latin *comēre, restructuring of Classical Latin comedere.
Pronunciation
Audio (Istanbul): (file)
Verb
komer (Hebrew spelling קומיר)[1]
- (ambitransitive) to eat; to dine (on something) [16th. c]
- 2005, Aki Yerushalayim[1], volumes 26–28, page 60:
- Se torno el haham dezesperado a su kaza i komio kon muncha ansia, despues de lo kualo metio su vestido blanko de Yom Kippur i entro al kal.
- The sagely yet desperate rabbi returned home and ate anxiously, after which he put on white clothes for Yom Kippur and entered the synagogue.
- (figurative, transitive) to eat away (corrode)
Noun
komer m (Hebrew spelling קומיר)[1]
- (countable) eating; food; meal
- 2000, La Lettre Sépharade[2], numbers 1–19, La Lettre Sépharade, page 6:
- Kuando vyenen de Israel los paryentes i amigos, syempre fazemos notchadas a mi kaza kon komeres de los Sefardim i todos se konsolan komyendo guevos inhaminados, burekitas, pastilikos, bumuelos, pita di letche, tajikos i otras kumidas savurozas.
- When relatives and friends come from Israel, we always throw night parties at my house with Sephardic meals and everybody comforts theirselves eating cholent eggs, little cheese patries, [other] pastries, doughnuts, milk bread, small cuts and other savoury dishes.