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MWmacaroni

macaroni

Flag: gbEnglishMerriam-Webster Dictionary

mac​a​ro​ni
noun
mac·​a·​ro·​ni
ˌma-kə-ˈrō-nē

Definition

  • pasta made from semolina and shaped in the form of slender tubes
  • [Macaroni Club, a group of such Englishmen] plural mac​a​ro​nis or mac​a​ro​nies
    a member of a class of traveled young Englishmen of the late 18th and early 19th centuries who affected foreign ways
    an affected young man fop
Synonyms & Antonyms
Synonyms
beau Beau Brummell buck dandy dude fop gallant jay lounge lizard pretty boy
Examples
  • //the glitter rock of the 1970s seemed more about mascaraed macaronis than about music
First Known Use
1673, in the meaning defined at sense 1
History and Etymology
borrowed from regional Italian, plural of macarone (Tuscan maccherone) "tubular pasta," earlier also "stuffed pasta of various shapes," probably borrowed from Middle Greek makarṓneia "funeral hymn," later with the presumed meaning "food served at a funeral banquet" (whence Modern Greek dialect makarōniá in this sense), of uncertain origin

NOTE: Though the Greek origin of Italian macaroni appears likely, many details are unclear. It has been speculated that the word makarṓneia is a blend of makários "blessed" and aiṓnios "eternal" (words perhaps coupled in funeral orations and memorial services), though this etymology is quite tenuous. The development of the food sense is also difficult to explain—perhaps it has developed through association with Greek makaría "dish of broth and barley groats," an apparently ancient word of uncertain origin attested only in the work of the Greek lexicographer Hesychius (5th-6th century a.d.).

macaroni
noun

Synonyms & Antonyms


mac​a​ro​ni
noun
mac·​a·​ro·​ni
ˌma-kə-ˈrō-nē

Definition

  • pasta made from semolina and shaped in the form of slender tubes
  • [Macaroni Club, a group of such Englishmen] plural mac​a​ro​nis or mac​a​ro​nies
    a member of a class of traveled young Englishmen of the late 18th and early 19th centuries who affected foreign ways
    an affected young man fop
Synonyms & Antonyms
Synonyms
beau Beau Brummell buck dandy dude fop gallant jay lounge lizard pretty boy
Examples
  • //the glitter rock of the 1970s seemed more about mascaraed macaronis than about music
First Known Use
1673, in the meaning defined at sense 1
History and Etymology
borrowed from regional Italian, plural of macarone (Tuscan maccherone) "tubular pasta," earlier also "stuffed pasta of various shapes," probably borrowed from Middle Greek makarṓneia "funeral hymn," later with the presumed meaning "food served at a funeral banquet" (whence Modern Greek dialect makarōniá in this sense), of uncertain origin

NOTE: Though the Greek origin of Italian macaroni appears likely, many details are unclear. It has been speculated that the word makarṓneia is a blend of makários "blessed" and aiṓnios "eternal" (words perhaps coupled in funeral orations and memorial services), though this etymology is quite tenuous. The development of the food sense is also difficult to explain—perhaps it has developed through association with Greek makaría "dish of broth and barley groats," an apparently ancient word of uncertain origin attested only in the work of the Greek lexicographer Hesychius (5th-6th century a.d.).

macaroni
noun

Synonyms & Antonyms


mac​a​ro​ni
noun
mac·​a·​ro·​ni
ˌma-kə-ˈrō-nē

Definition

  • pasta made from semolina and shaped in the form of slender tubes
  • [Macaroni Club, a group of such Englishmen] plural mac​a​ro​nis or mac​a​ro​nies
    a member of a class of traveled young Englishmen of the late 18th and early 19th centuries who affected foreign ways
    an affected young man fop
Synonyms & Antonyms
Synonyms
beau Beau Brummell buck dandy dude fop gallant jay lounge lizard pretty boy
Examples
  • //the glitter rock of the 1970s seemed more about mascaraed macaronis than about music
First Known Use
1673, in the meaning defined at sense 1
History and Etymology
borrowed from regional Italian, plural of macarone (Tuscan maccherone) "tubular pasta," earlier also "stuffed pasta of various shapes," probably borrowed from Middle Greek makarṓneia "funeral hymn," later with the presumed meaning "food served at a funeral banquet" (whence Modern Greek dialect makarōniá in this sense), of uncertain origin

NOTE: Though the Greek origin of Italian macaroni appears likely, many details are unclear. It has been speculated that the word makarṓneia is a blend of makários "blessed" and aiṓnios "eternal" (words perhaps coupled in funeral orations and memorial services), though this etymology is quite tenuous. The development of the food sense is also difficult to explain—perhaps it has developed through association with Greek makaría "dish of broth and barley groats," an apparently ancient word of uncertain origin attested only in the work of the Greek lexicographer Hesychius (5th-6th century a.d.).

macaroni
noun

Synonyms & Antonyms