Q:

What is the latin word for 'fire'

Answer

The origin of the word "biscuit" is from Latin via Middle French and means "cooked twice," hence biscotti in Medieval Italian.In modern Italian usage the term biscotto is used to refer to any type of cookie, but not a savory cracker. ChaCha soon!

Categorized In: Translations , Language & Lookup

Source: Biscuit - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia | en.wikipedia.org

Description: The origin of the word "biscuit" is from Latin via Middle French and means "cooked twice," 1 hence biscotti in Medieval Italian

Nov 14, 07:00pm

Comments
No comments yet
Post a Comment
 
More ChaCha Answers (1)

The Latin word for fire is indediare or inflammo, from which we get our words incendiary and inflame. ChaCha on!

Apr 26 2009, 10:34pm | Source: Online Dictionary Search Results | www.freedict.com
Popular Searches
latin word for fire, what is the latin word for fire, latin word fire, the latin word for fire, what is the latin word for biscuit, latin name for fire, latin word for the fire, what is fire in latin, latin word that means fire, what's fire in latin

Related Questions

Who | What | When | Where | Why | How