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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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On Dec 13, 7:35*am, "Nancy Young" > wrote:
> Charlene Charette wrote: > > Steve Wertz wrote: > >> On 12 May 2007 17:25:15 -0700, wrote: > > >>> There is no d in refrigerate. > > >> But there is in 'fridge'. *Go figure. > > That's because "fridge" comes from "Frigidaire" not "refrigerator". > > And if you spell it "frig" it doesn't look as if it's pronounced "fridge".. > > nancy Re is used as a preposition here meaning; in re, as to, regarding. Refrigerate means *regarding cold*. M-W re·frig·er·ate transitive verb Etymology: Latin refrigeratus, past participle of refrigerare, from re- + frigerare to cool, from frigor-, frigus cold — more at frigid Date: 1534 : to make or keep cold or cool ; specifically : to freeze or chill (as food) for preservation --- re preposition Etymology: Latin, abl. of res thing — more at real Date: 1707 : with regard to : in re --- |
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