manti
English
Etymology
The immediate source is Turkish mantı or Ottoman Turkish مانطی (mantı). Before that, the origin is obscure. The word was widespread in Central Asia by the 13th century. Possibly from Middle Chinese 饅頭 (man duw), which would make it a doublet of mandu, manju, and mantou.
Noun
manti (plural manti or manties)
- A type of dumpling served in Turkish, Armenian and Central Asian cuisine
- 1998 November 13, Ted Shen, “Restaurant Tours: Metin Kurtulus serves Turkey”, in Chicago Reader[2]:
- And they kept one of the national dishes, manti (pasta stuffed with ground beef served in garlic-yogurt sauce, $11.50), as well as lahmacun, sort of a Turkish pizza ($3), and arnavut cigeri (fried calf's liver and potatoes, $5.75), a hot appetizer.
- 2007 December 5, Melissa Clark, “When It Looks at You, It’s Done”, in New York Times[3]:
- Crowding the table were miniature, hand-formed lamb dumplings called manti; flaky pastries, called boreks, filled with wild greens; and an elaborate paste of chicken, wheat and pistachios called keskek.
Translations
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Further reading
- Manti (food) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Anagrams
Guinea-Bissau Creole
Etymology
From Portuguese manter. Cognate with Kabuverdianu manti "maintain".
Verb
manti
Indonesian
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈmanti/
- Rhymes: -ti, -i
- Hyphenation: man‧ti
Etymology 1
From Minangkabau [Term?], from Pali mantī (“minister”), from Sanskrit मन्त्री (mantrī).[1] Doublet of mandarin, mantri, and menteri.
Noun
manti (plural manti-manti)
- alternative spelling of menteri (“minister”)
Etymology 2
From Turkish mantı or Ottoman Turkish مانطی with possible cognate of Chinese 饅頭/馒头 (mántou).
Noun
manti (plural manti-manti)
References
Further reading
- “manti” in Kamus Besar Bahasa Indonesia, Jakarta: Agency for Language Development and Cultivation – Ministry of Education, Culture, Research, and Technology of the Republic of Indonesia, 2016.
Italian
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈman.ti/
- Rhymes: -anti
- Hyphenation: màn‧ti
Etymology 1
See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.
Noun
manti m
- plural of manto
Etymology 2
From Ottoman Turkish مانطی (mantı) or Turkish mantı.
Noun
manti m (invariable)
- manti (meat-filled pockets of pasta in Turkey and Central Asia)
Anagrams
Pali
Alternative forms
- 𑀫𑀦𑁆𑀢𑀺 (Brahmi script)
- मन्ति (Devanagari script)
- মন্তি (Bengali script)
- මන්ති (Sinhalese script)
- မန္တိ or မၼ္တိ or မၼ်တိ (Burmese script)
- มนฺติ or มันติ (Thai script)
- ᨾᨶ᩠ᨲᩥ (Tai Tham script)
- ມນ຺ຕິ or ມັນຕິ (Lao script)
- មន្តិ (Khmer script)
- 𑄟𑄚𑄴𑄖𑄨 (Chakma script)
Noun
manti
- vocative singular of mantin (“counsellor”)
Swazi
Etymology
From emanti.
Relative
-mânti
Inflection
| modifier | copulative | |
|---|---|---|
| 1st singular | lengimanti | ngimanti |
| 2nd singular | lomanti | umanti |
| 1st plural | lesimanti | simanti |
| 2nd plural | lenimanti | nimanti |
| class 1 | lomanti | umanti |
| class 2 | labamanti | bamanti |
| class 3 | lomanti | umanti |
| class 4 | lemanti | imanti |
| class 5 | lelimanti | limanti |
| class 6 | lamanti | amanti |
| class 7 | lesimanti | simanti |
| class 8 | letimanti | timanti |
| class 9 | lemanti | imanti |
| class 10 | letimanti | timanti |
| class 11 | lolumanti | lumanti |
| class 14 | lobumanti | bumanti |
| class 15 | lokumanti | kumanti |
| class 17 | lokumanti | kumanti |
Turkish
Noun
manti (definite accusative mantiyi, plural mantiler)
Declension
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See also
Uzbek
Etymology
Noun
manti