foie
English
Noun
foie (uncountable) (lit. liver)
- (colloquial) Ellipsis of foie gras.
- 2005, Los Angeles Magazine, volume 50, number 5, page 159:
- Everything's even better than it sounds: endive, watercress, and aged Stilton salad, frog legs amandine with celeriac puree, buffalo foie burger with truffle fries on a brioche bun, campfire trout.
- 2006, Chuck Johnson; Blanche Johnson, Savor Idaho Cookbook:
- Season the foie and sear until dark golden brown. Drain off and reserve the foie, adding the fat back into the pan and bring heat back up.
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French
Etymology
From Old French foie, feie, from Late Latin fīcātum (“liver (as food)”), from Latin iecur fīcātum (“fig-stuffed liver, foie gras”). The French form goes back to a byform ficatum with a short accented -i- (whence Italian fegato), which was then metathesed to *fitacum. The last also underlies in Catalan fetge.
Pronunciation
Derived terms
- avoir les foies
- foie gras
- huile de foie de morue
Further reading
- “foie”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
Italian
Old French
Alternative forms
Spanish
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈfwa/ [ˈfwa]
- Rhymes: -a
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