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pieróg

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See also: pierog and Pieróg

English

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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From Polish pieróg. Doublet of pirog.

Noun

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pieróg (plural pierogi)

  1. Rare form of pierogi.
    • 2010 November 19, Victor Sack, “Pelmeni, perogie, peroshki...”, in rec.food.cooking (Usenet):
      That thing certainly does not look anything like a pieróg. To me, it looks like sliced boiled potato.
    • 2014 April, Jenny Bowman, “Delicacy of the north: Pierogies, recently opened in Oak Island, dishes up Polish dumplings to perfection”, in Southport Magazine, volume two, number seven, page 14:
      So what is a pieróg, exactly? (Plural is pierogi or can be pierogies.) Well, it’s essentially a dough dumpling stuffed with savory goodness like potato and cheese or onion, hot sausage, or sauerkraut, to name a few fillings.
    • 2018, Kaitlyn Cammer, “St. Volodymyr’s the Great Ukrainian Catholic Church”, in Utica Proud, volume one, page 30:
      Giving Back to the Community One Pieróg at a Time
    • 2019 September, Geraldine Balut Coleman, “Tekla Klebetnica Thrills Crowds”, in Polish American Journal, volume 108, number 9, section “Celebrating Pierogi”, page 7, column 3:
      But there was also one pieróg version that did not win the popularity contest. It was called pizzowego (pizzarogis), a pieróg filled with a combination of sausage, pepperoni, and cheese, doused with tomato sauce.
    • 2022 April 14, Priscilla Totiyapungprasert, “At this Ukrainian restaurant, dumplings go by many names, but always taste like home”, in The Arizona Republic[1]:
      In the photo she's wearing a green floral headscarf and spooning cherry filling into a pieróg.

Polish

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Polish Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia pl
pierogi sense 2
pieróg sense 3
pieróg sense 4

Alternative forms

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Etymology

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Inherited from Old Polish piróg, from Proto-Slavic *pirogъ.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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pieróg m inan (diminutive pierożek, related adjective pierogowy)

  1. dumpling (ball of dough that is cooked and may have a filling and/or additional ingredients in the dough)
  2. pierogi (square- or crescent-shaped Polish dumpling of unleavened dough, stuffed with sauerkraut, cheese, mashed potatoes, cabbage, onion, meat, or any combination of these, or with a fruit filling)
  3. pirog (baked case of dough with a sweet or savoury filling, popular in Eastern Europe)
  4. (historical, military) bicorn (two-cornered hat worn by European and American military and naval officers from the 1790s)
    Synonym: bikorn
  5. (vulgar) vulva, pudenda (external female sex organs)
    Synonyms: pierożek, srom

Declension

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Derived terms

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nouns

Further reading

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  • pieróg in Wielki słownik języka polskiego, Instytut Języka Polskiego PAN
  • pieróg in Polish dictionaries at PWN
  • pieróg in PWN's encyclopedia