cocer

(Îngilîzî)

  1. to boil
  2. to cook (only used in situations where the food being prepared is submitted to fire; such as through the processes of boiling, simmering or steaming anything; or baking bread slowly in an oven)
  3. (figuratively, reflexive) to brew
  4. (pronominal) to chafe (get sore)

Pircarînî

38k
Bi hîfenê ve hatîye girêdan wek
co‧cer
Wekî (IPA) tê bilêvkirin
/koˈθeɾ/
Etîmolojî (Îngilîzî)

In summary

Inherited from Old Spanish cozer, from Late Latin cocere, from Latin coquere. Cognate with English cook. Some conjugated forms of the verb were reformed through analogy with the infinitive; in older Spanish, the forms cueza and cuezo were cuega and cuego (< Late Latin cocam, cocō), cocí was coxe (< Latin coxī), and the past participle was cocho (< Latin coctus).

Sign in to write sticky notes