baccalaru
Appearance
Sicilian
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Dutch bakaliaw, of uncertain origin. Possibly from Vulgar Latin *baccalarium (“the place of the [wooden] stick”), Latin baculum (“stick, staff”), referring to the way cod were split and dried on wooden sticks.
If the element *bak- is a metathesis of *kab- (compare French cabillaud and German Kabeljau from Dutch kabeljauw), then the original form of the word could have been *cabalao, maybe meaning "large-headed fish" (cf. Ibero-Romance words, such as Spanish cabo, cabal, from Latin caput (“head”)).
Cognate to Catalan bacallà, Portuguese bacalhau, Spanish bacalao.
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]baccalaru m (plural baccalari)
Categories:
- Sicilian terms derived from Dutch
- Sicilian terms with unknown etymologies
- Sicilian terms derived from Vulgar Latin
- Sicilian terms derived from Latin
- Sicilian terms derived from Romance languages
- Sicilian terms with IPA pronunciation
- Sicilian lemmas
- Sicilian nouns
- Sicilian masculine nouns
- Sicilian vulgarities
- Sicilian slang
- Sicilian terms with usage examples