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Farĉo

من Simon Pure, 6 فبراير، 2013

المشاركات: 15

لغة: English

Simon Pure (عرض الملف الشخصي) 8 فبراير، 2013 10:27:36 م

Kirilo81:
Of course "ground meat" would be more logical in German, too, I think the name comes from a time when the meat was actually produced by hacking.
But E-o shouldn't have this germanism, I agree.
It is "viandmuelilo", not *viandhak(et)ilo, so why not muelviando?
Vikipedio uses viandhaketaĵo (link). Viandhaketaĵo seems to have made its way into most translators. A Google search will bring up a large number of hits.

It does seem odd that one makes haketaĵo with a muelilo. Logically muelviando or viandmueliaĵo make more sense. Muelviando will get hits here in the Lernu forums and Google though not as many as viandhaketaĵo.

sudanglo (عرض الملف الشخصي) 9 فبراير، 2013 10:49:46 ص

Vikipedio acknowledges the point by immediately beginning the article with Viandhaketaĵo estas miksaĵo de muelita viando

Chainy (عرض الملف الشخصي) 9 فبراير، 2013 12:23:25 م

Kirilo81:It is "viandmuelilo", not *viandhak(et)ilo, so why not muelviando?
The dictionary of Sonja Kisa includes the word 'muelviando': Ground meat

At the moment, the Lernu dictionary (ENG-EO) contains:
minced meat = viandhaketaĵo

mince = haketi
Maybe we should change that to:

minced/ground meat = muelita viando, muelviando; hakviando, viandhaketaĵo

mince = mueli, haketi

- the 'hak-' forms are certainly out there and quite widely used, so we probably shouldn't delete them from the dictionary. Adding the 'muel-' forms enables users to choose...

sudanglo (عرض الملف الشخصي) 9 فبراير، 2013 1:21:15 م

For the Tekstaro haketi is an unknown verb. On the other hand mueli very common.

jkph00 (عرض الملف الشخصي) 13 فبراير، 2013 2:26:20 م

sudanglo:Americans say ground meat for mince-meat. Well to grind is mueli not haketi.


For me haketi is what some small carrion eater might do to the corpse of larger animal, or how some crazed dwarf might attack a normal adult with a small blade.
Just so. My wife's version of local recipes often includes "ground beast" in the ingredients. okulumo.gif

The word "mince" is very rarely used hereabouts. It is mostly passive vocabulary, understood but not used. When I was a boy my aunt sometimes made a "mincemeat pie" at Christmastime whose filling was a mixture of very finely ground meat, fruit and spices. It was, er, different.

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