liyempo

Tagalog

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Hokkien, possibly from:

  • (leng-pó͘, literally dried breast meat),[1][2] which Manuel (1948) defined as (leng, milk; udder; breast) + (pô͘, udder of any animal).[3] Lim (1941) records the same word romanized as "lin po" with the characters, (literally “breast region”).[4] Compare Hokkien (lin, breast), (pó͘, “dried meat”), 肉脯 (bah-pó͘, “dried (and processed) meat”), 撚部尾 (lián-pō͘-bé, “lower abdomen”).[5]
  • 鐮刀镰刀 (liâm-to, sickle) + (bah, meat), which Chan-Yap (1980) defined the former as "stomach portion of pig",[6] likely referring to the streaky appearance of pork belly. Compare Mandarin 鐮刀镰刀 (liándāo), Hokkien 腳廉刀脚廉刀 (kha-liâm-to, tibia; shinbone).

Zorc (1985) records both etymologies but finds Manuel (1948)'s as less likely.[7]

Pronunciation

  • Hyphenation: li‧yem‧po
  • IPA(key): /liˈempo/, [ˈljem.po]

Noun

liyempo

  1. pork belly; streaky pork

Descendants

  • English: liempo
  • Spanish: liempo

See also

References

  1. Governor-General of Taiwan (1931–1932), 乳房”, in 小川尚義 (OGAWA Naoyoshi), editor, 臺日大辭典 [Taiwanese-Japanese Dictionary] (in Japanese and Min Nan), Taihoku: 同府 (Dōfu), →OCLC
  2. “台華線頂辭典”, in ChhoeTaigi 找台語, 2002+, 番號: 48412 & 50022
  3. Manuel, E. Arsenio (1948) Chinese elements in the Tagalog language, Manila: Filipiniana Publications, pages 36 & 38
  4. Lim, Vicente (1941) Chinese-English-Tagalog-Spanish Business conversation and social contact with Amoy pronunciation, Manila: Poc Bon Book Co., page 128
  5. Governor-General of Taiwan (1931–1932), 撚部尾”, in 小川尚義 (OGAWA Naoyoshi), editor, 臺日大辭典 [Taiwanese-Japanese Dictionary] (in Japanese and Min Nan), Taihoku: 同府 (Dōfu), →OCLC
  6. Chan-Yap, Gloria (1980), “Hokkien Chinese borrowings in Tagalog”, in Pacific Linguistics (PDF), volume B, issue 71, Canberra, A.C.T. 2600.: The Australian National University, page 136
  7. Zorc, David Paul (1985) Core Etymological Dictionary of Filipino: Part 4, page 219
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