"Sibesabz" means Green Apple in Farsi.

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Italian's Top Ten Words

What would be your nominee for the most important Italian word (historically and culturally) that has entered your language? In a recent poll, the Società Dante Alighieri asked this question of non-Italians around the world. Here are the top ten words they chose:

1. Pizza: a kind of focaccia bread called picea dates back to the Roman empire. A definition from 997 describes a sottile focaccia di pasta (a soft focaccia of dough) seasoned with oil, mozzarella and other flavorings and baked in an oven. Over the centuries the Neapolitans gained fame for their savory pizza creations. In the 19th century the Bourbon king ruling Naples so enjoyed the creations of a pizzaiolo named Don Domenico Testa that he bequeathed on him the title Monsieur, usually reserved for the chefs de cuisine of royal households. Monsu, as the Neapolitans pronounced the honorific, remains a nickname for the city’s pizza bakers.

It's a really yummy pizza!!
2. Cappuccino: a mixture of espresso and frothy milk named because its soft nut-brown color resembles that of the habits of cappuccini monks. Italians drink it only in the morning with a cornetto or other pastry.

Un cappuccino, per favore!
3. Spaghetti: fine macaroni, from “spago” for string. The first written record of this dish was found in a travelogue written around 1154 that described the production and drying of thin noodles called itriyya (an Arabic word that Italians translated into vermicelli, or little worms) in a village in Sicily. Sailors probably transported this durable food to Genoa and Pisa, where spaghetti and vermicelli appear in personal wills and inventories.

Mmm... It's spaghetti!!
4. Espresso: specially made black coffee produced by a process that forces hot water through ground coffee beans at high pressure. The result is deep black with a shimmering light brown crema on top. An Italian culinary encyclopedia states that espresso is coffee at its best, “refreshing the mind, cheering the spirit, and disposing the drinker both to dream and reflect.”

Una tazzina di caffè espresso
5. Mozzarella: a soft cheese whose name comes from mozzare, which means to tear by hand, a crucial step in the process of making mozzarella. Its name also may come from scamozzata, a southern Italian term meaning “without a shirt” an apt description of a soft cheese that lacks a dry or hard covering.

Mozzarella cheese
6. Tiramisù: a popular dessert whose name literally means “pick me up!” made in various ways that combine savoiardi (similar to lady finger biscuits) dipped in espresso with a whipped mixture of egg yolks, mascarpone, and sugar, topped with cocoa.

Tirame su!
7. Bravo: defined in the 14th century as praise for someone who “completes his proper work with good will and ability.” This word of exhortation or encouragement is used only for creatures that breathe. A singer might merit a “bravo!”; the song, a buono or bello (or both).
8. Allegro: Dante used this word in the 1290s to mean light or playful; several centuries later its meaning expanded to cheerful, merry, or good humored; it also denotes lively music played at a rapid tempo.
9. Lasagne: flat noodles made from dough that date back to a pasta called langanum or lagane, which the ancient Romans cooked and ate. Italians use the plural form, as they do for spaghetti.

It makes one's mouth water!
10. Risotto: rice cooked in broth until it is completely absorbed; prepared with various additions, such as porcini mushrooms, saffron, seafood, and asparagus.

This looks like a wonderful healthy and delicious dish!
Other terms that placed in the top twenty include: dolce vita, gondola, paparazzi, ravioli, prima donna, fiasco, malaria, and terracotta.
Food is a very important part of Italian culture. That's why the Italian cuisine is well-known and loved throughout the world. Besides, Italian chefs are very famous for introducing the world to wonderful Italian cooking.
And this poll shows that how important is food to human society!
What words would you nominate?



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