pepper
英 [ˈpep.ər]
美 [ˈpep.ɚ]
- n. 胡椒;辣椒;胡椒粉
- vt. 加胡椒粉于;使布满
- n. (Pepper)人名;(英、德、意)佩珀
pepper 辣椒,胡椒来自拉丁语piper,辣椒,来自希腊语piperi,可能最终来自梵语pippali,辣椒,长青椒。
- pepper
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pepper: [OE] The pepper vine is a native of the East Indies, and its name is oriental in origin too. It comes ultimately from Sanskrit pippalí, which meant ‘berry’, and hence ‘peppercorn’. It came west via Greek péperi and Latin piper, and was borrowed in prehistoric times into the West Germanic languages, giving German pfeffer, Dutch peper, and English pepper. Its application to fruits of the capsicum family, or their pungent dried products (no relation to the original pepper), dates from the 16th century. Pimpernel is a derivative of Latin piper.
=> pimpernel
- pepper (n.)
- Old English pipor, from an early West Germanic borrowing of Latin piper "pepper," from Greek piperi, probably (via Persian) from Middle Indic pippari, from Sanskrit pippali "long pepper." The Latin word is the source of German Pfeffer, Italian pepe, French poivre, Old Church Slavonic pipru, Lithuanian pipiras, Old Irish piobhar, Welsh pybyr, etc. Application to fruits of the capsicum family (unrelated, originally native of tropical America) is 16c.
- pepper (v.)
- "to sprinkle as with pepper," 1610s, from pepper (n.). Old English had gepipera. Meaning "to pelt with shot, etc." is from 1640s. Related: Peppered; peppering.
- 1. Season with salt, pepper and a pinch of cayenne.
- 调以盐、胡椒和少许辣椒粉。
- 2. She sprinkled pepper on my grub, watching me nosh.
- 她在我的食物上撒了点胡椒粉,看着我吃。
- 3. Roll the meat in coarsely ground black pepper to season it.
- 将肉在粗研的黑胡椒粉里滚一下以调味。
- 4. Season the meat with salt and pepper.
- 用盐和胡椒粉给肉调味。
- 5. Season the steaks generously with salt and pepper.
- 给牛排多加些盐和胡椒调味。