Advertisement
83 entries found
sugar (n.)
late 13c.,
sugre
, from Old French
sucre
"sugar" (12c.), from Medieval Latin
succarum
, from Arabic
sukkar
, from Persian
shakar
, from Sanskrit
sharkara
"ground or candied sugar," originally "grit, gravel" (cognate with Greek
kroke
"pebble"). The Arabic word also was borrowed in Italian (
zucchero
), Spanish (
azucar
, with the Arabic article), and German (Old High German
zucura
, German
Zucker
), and its forms are represented in most European languages (such as Serbian
cukar
, Polish
cukier
, Russian
sakhar
).
Its Old World home was India (Alexander the Great's companions marveled at the "honey without bees") and it remained exotic in Europe until the Arabs began to cultivate it in Sicily and Spain; not until after the Crusades did it begin to rival honey as the West's sweetener. The Spaniards in the West Indies began raising sugar cane in 1506; first grown in Cuba 1523; first cultivated in Brazil 1532. The reason for the
-g-
in the English word is obscure (OED compares
flagon
, from French
flacon
). The pronunciation shift from
s-
to
sh-
is probably from the initial long vowel sound
syu-
(as in
sure
).
As a type of chemical compound from 1826. Slang "euphemistic substitute for an imprecation" [OED] is attested from 1891. As a term of endearment, first recorded 1930.
Sugar-cane
is from 1560s.
Sugar-maple
is from 1731.
Sugar loaf
was originally a moulded conical mass of refined sugar (early 15c.); now obsolete, but sense extended 17c. to hills, hats, etc. of that shape.
Related entries & more
Advertisement
sugar (v.)
early 15c., "to sweeten with sugar," also figuratively, "to make more pleasing, mitigate the harshness of," from
sugar
(n.). Related:
Sugared
;
sugaring
.
Related entries & more
sugar-plum (n.)
c. 1600, figurative, "something sweet or agreeable;" see
sugar
(n.) +
plum
(n.). As a type of small, round, flavored candy, from 1660s.
Related entries & more
sugar daddy (n.)
also
sugar-daddy
, "elderly man who lavishes gifts on a young woman" [OED], 1926, from
sugar
+
daddy
.
Related entries & more
sugar-coat (v.)
also
sugarcoat
, 1870, originally of medicine; figuratively, "make more palatable," from 1910; from
sugar
(n.) +
coat
(v.). Related:
Sugarcoated
;
sugarcoating
.
Related entries & more
Advertisement
sugary (adj.)
1590s, literal and figurative, from
sugar
(n.) +
-y
(2). Related:
Sugariness
.
Related entries & more
sucrose (n.)
"cane-sugar, white crystalline sugar used as a sweetener," 1857, from French
sucre
"sugar" (see
sugar
(n.)) + chemical suffix
-ose
(2).
Related entries & more
sucro-
before vowels
sucr-
, scientific word-forming element meaning "sugar," from Latinized form of French
sucre
"sugar" (see
sugar
(n.)).
Related entries & more
saccharine (adj.)
1670s, "of or like sugar," from Medieval Latin
saccharum
"sugar," from Latin
saccharon
"sugar," from Greek
sakkharon
, from Pali
sakkhara
, from Sanskrit
sarkara
"gravel, grit" (see
sugar
). Metaphoric sense of "overly sweet" first recorded 1841. For the sugar substitute, see
saccharin
.
Related entries & more
seersucker (n.)
1722, from Hindi
sirsakar
, East Indian corruption of Persian
shir o shakkar
"striped cloth," literally "milk and sugar," a reference to the alternately smooth and puckered surfaces of the stripes. From Persian
shir
(cognate with Sanskrit
ksiram
"milk") +
shakar
(cognate with Pali
sakkhara
, Sanskrit
sarkara
"gravel, grit, sugar;" see
sugar
(n.)).
Related entries & more
Next
Prev
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Next
Advertisement
Trending Words
1. self
2. love
3. good
4. post
5. science
6. etymology
7. free
8. head
9. time
10. anti
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z