paunch - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Middle English paunche, from Old Northern French panche, Old French pance (French panse), from Latin pantex.
paunch (plural paunches)
- The first compartment of the stomach of a ruminant, the rumen.
- The contents of this stomach in a slaughtered animal, viewed as food or a byproduct.
- The belly of a human, especially a large, fat protruding one.
Since retiring from athletics, he has developed a paunch.
2022 July 26, William Meny & Paul Simms, “The Night Market” (10:28 from the start), in What We Do in the Shadows[1], season 4, episode 4, spoken by Ringmaster (Nick Corirossi):
“And another sort of weak, flailing blow to the paunch. Neither of these two are in any condition to be fighting.”
- (nautical) A paunch mat.
- The thickened rim of a bell, struck by the clapper.
- (protruding belly): See also Thesaurus:paunch.
first stomach of ruminant; rumen
- Bulgarian: търбух (bg) m (tǎrbuh)
- Czech: bachor (cs) m
- Dutch: pens (nl)
- Finnish: pötsi (fi)
- French: panse (fr) f
- German: Pansen (de) m
- Greek: κοιλιά (el) f (koiliá)
- Hungarian: bendő (hu)
- Irish: méadail mhór f
- Italian: pancia (it) f, rumine (it) m
- Portuguese: pança (pt) f
- Romanian: rumen (ro) n, ierbar (ro) n, burduhan (ro) n, burduf (ro) n
- Russian: рубе́ц (ru) m (rubéc)
- Spanish: panza (es) f
- Swedish: våm (sv) c
- Ukrainian: рубець m (rubecʹ)
large, protruding belly
- Arabic: كَرِش f (kariš)
- Egyptian Arabic: كرش m (kerš)
- Armenian: փոր (hy) (pʻor)
- Bulgarian: шкембе (bg) n (škembe)
- Catalan: panxa (ca) f, (colloquial) butza (ca) f
- Czech: pupek (cs) m, panděro (cs) n
- Danish: vom c, bug c
- Dutch: pens (nl) m, buik (nl)
- Esperanto: ventro (eo)
- Finnish: pötsi (fi)
- French: bedaine (fr) f, panse (fr) f
- Galician: bandullo (gl) m, andorga f, panza (gl) f, barriga (gl) f
- Georgian: ღიპი (ɣiṗi)
- German: Wampe (de) f, Plauze (de) f, Wanst (de) m
- Gothic: 𐍅𐌰𐌼𐌱𐌰 f (wamba)
- Greek: προκοίλι (el) n (prokoíli)
- Hungarian: has (hu), pocak (hu)
- Irish: maróg f, blonag (ga) f
- Italian: pancia (it) f, pancione (it) m, buzzo m, trippa (it) f
- Middle English: paunche
- Polish: bebech (pl) m
- Portuguese: pança (pt) f
- Punjabi: ਗੋਗੜ f (gogaṛ)
- Romanian: burduhan (ro) n, burdihan (ro) n, pântec (ro) n, pântece (ro) n
- Russian: брю́хо (ru) n (brjúxo), пу́зо (ru) m (púzo)
- Spanish: panza (es) f, barriga (es) f, guata (es) f
- Swedish: buk (sv) c
- Tagalog: buyon
- Ukrainian: пузо n (puzo), черевце n (čerevce)
- Volapük: lugötöp
- Welsh: bol (cy) m, cest f
paunch (third-person singular simple present paunches, present participle paunching, simple past and past participle paunched)
- To remove the internal organs of a ruminant, prior to eating.
1610–1611 (date written), William Shakespeare, “The Tempest”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies […] (First Folio), London: […] Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, →OCLC, [Act III, scene ii]:
paunch
- Alternative form of paunche