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prato - Wiktionary, the free dictionary

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

prato (Sargadelos, 19th century)

    Inherited from Old Galician-Portuguese prato, borrowed from Vulgar Latin *plattus, borrowed from Ancient Greek πλατύς (platús), from Proto-Indo-European *pléth₂us, from *pleth₂- + *-us.

    prato f (plural pratos)

    1. dish, plate
    2. dish, preparation; recipe
      • 1707, Salvador Francisco Roel, Entremés ao real e feliz parto da nosa raíña:

        E pois eu doze perdizes,
        e de polos ducia e media
        lle hei de lebar se Deus quer,
        e se podo vnha Tenreyra,
        por ser prato regalado
        que se estima en calquer mesa.

        Then I twelve partridges
        and a dozen and a half chickens
        I ought to take, God willing,
        and if I can a calf [veal]
        because it is an enticing dish
        that is appreciated in any table.

    From Latin prātum (meadow).

    • IPA(key): /ˈpra.to/
    • Rhymes: -ato
    • Hyphenation: prà‧to

    prato m (plural prati)

    1. grass, lawn (ground covered with grass kept closely mown)
      falciare il pratoto mow the lawn
    2. meadow

    prātō

    1. dative/ablative singular of prātum

    Old Galician-Portuguese

    [edit]

      Semi-learned borrowing from Vulgar Latin *plattus, borrowed from Ancient Greek πλατύς (platús), from Proto-Indo-European *pléth₂us, from *pleth₂- + *-us. Doublet of prata and *chato.

      • IPA(key): /ˈpɾato/
      • Rhymes: -ato
      • Hyphenation: pra‧to

      prato m (plural pratos)

      1. dish, plate
        • 1435, A. López Carreira (ed.), Fragmentos de notarios, doc. E2-39:

          Rematouse enno meestre a sartana e o prato de Davi por X

          Davi's pan and dish were auctioned to the Master
        • 1459, A. López Carreira (ed.), Fragmentos de notarios, doc. D40a:

          Dous barriis, quatro pichees destano, dous pratos destano e hun de madeira … Hun conqeiro con viinte et quatro conqas et seys pratos de madeira, et tres malladeras et hun enbudo

          Two barrels, four tin pitchers, two tin dishes and a wooden one … a cupboard with twenty-four cups and six wooden dishes, and three bowls for shucking and a funnel
      prato

        Inherited from Old Galician-Portuguese prato, borrowed from Vulgar Latin *plattus, borrowed from Ancient Greek πλατύς (platús), from Proto-Indo-European *pléth₂us, from *pleth₂- + *-us. Doublet of the popularly inherited chato and the Hellenism plati-.

        • Rhymes: -atu
        • Hyphenation: pra‧to

        prato m (plural pratos)

        1. plate
          1. a flat dish from which food is served or eaten
          2. a course at a meal
        2. (music) cymbal
          Synonym: címbalo

        For quotations using this term, see Citations:prato.