tuco
See also: tučo
English
Etymology
Noun
tuco (uncountable)
- A tomato-based pasta sauce, similar to a ragout or bolognese, traditionally consumed in South America.
- 2015, John M. Keller, Abracadabrantesque, New York, N.Y., […]: Dr. Cicero Books, →ISBN, page 440:
- We ate ñoqui in a tuco sauce that they'd ordered already prepared, and Soriano and I drank wine, a De Lucca cabernet sauvignon, while Felip didn't drink anything at all […]
- 2017, Carolyn Caldicott, World Street Food: Easy Recipes for Young Travellers, London: Pimpernel Press Ltd., →ISBN, page 61:
- Customize your tuco sauce: add sliced mushrooms, diced aubergine or sliced spinach, or think of some ideas of your own.
See also
etymologically unrelated
Further reading
Spanish
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈtuko/ [ˈt̪u.ko]
Audio (Costa Rica): (file) - Rhymes: -uko
- Syllabification: tu‧co
Etymology 1
Probably from Latin tucca (sauce). Compare to Italian tocco or Venetan tocio.
Noun
tuco m (plural tucos)
Etymology 2
Onomatopoeic.
Adjective
tuco (feminine tuca, masculine plural tucos, feminine plural tucas)
- (Puerto Rico, Bolivia, Venezuela) one-armed
Noun
tuco m (plural tucos)
- (Asturias) pork bone, hard thing
- (Asturias, Guatemala, Honduras, Puerto Rico) stump
- (Costa Rica, Ecuador, Nicaragua, Panama) piece of wood
Etymology 3
Borrowed from Quechua tucu.
Noun
tuco m (plural tucos)
Etymology 4
Noun
tuco m (plural tucos)
- (Peru) a kind of owl
Further reading
- “tuco”, in Diccionario de la lengua española [Dictionary of the Spanish Language] (in Spanish), online version 23.8, Royal Spanish Academy [Spanish: Real Academia Española], 10 December 2024