In reply to A newbie all over again! by Annec
In reply to A newbie all over again! by Annec
Ooooops!!! Actually I had thought so, until my Italian lawyer friend told me courgette singular in Italian was feminine. I'll kill him!!! lol
In reply to A newbie all over again! by Annec
Wot a laugh - Signora Typo teaching Italian spelling! :bigergrin:
In reply to A newbie all over again! by Annec
Good advice to get back into shape, not that I need it as I was sick during most of the festivities so I did not have chance to indulge. But it is a good idea to get rid of toxins, etc. through eating more fruit and vegetables. Common sense!
In reply to A newbie all over again! by Annec
So sorry that you were unwell Gala, a mixed blessing. For me it's back to the village ladies gym classes because I did put on exactly 2 chili and I enjoyed every single thing I ate over the holiday!
In reply to A newbie all over again! by Annec
I don't think that it is a problem to put on that extra weight during the festivities, providing you get rid of those pounds through a sensible diet and exercise. The dangerous thing is when you keep on accumulating pounds and as you get older they do not help at all. I am now researching my recipe files and I will start soon a thread on "Healthy Italian Cooking", tasty but with less calories and I am sure that we can all share some recipes.
In reply to A newbie all over again! by Annec
Just returning to "zucchini"for a minute I've just looked up "zucchine" on google.it There are plenty of results.
In reply to A newbie all over again! by Annec
Also I have now looked up "zucchini" It seems merely to be peoples' surname.
In reply to A newbie all over again! by Annec
But you see Sally, this is where a little knowledge is dangerous.
What would you do with zucchino and zucchina? Which term is more commonly used throughout Italy? What are the reasons why the masculine or feminine version is used? When you know this - then you can decide on how to pluralise the word with any confidence.
As for "Zucchini" merely being used as a surname - have you never heard of Jasper Carrott? :bigergrin:
In reply to A newbie all over again! by Annec
I'm with Sally on this one - I didn't think 'zucchini' looked right. My dictionary agrees with Carole B - the singular is masculine, but all of the recipe books I could lay my hands on (Italian published) have 'le zucchine' - feminine plural.
So - either it is one of those words which change sex when they enter the kitchen (like il tavolo from the office becomes la tavola when it is put in the dining room), or it is one of thoe words which change sex depending on what use they are put to (la stecca straight from the tree becomes lo stecco when it is fashioned into a pointer or billiard cue), or it has an irregular sex change when it gets plural (il mano, le mani).
I favour the stecca or tavolo scenario (only on the basis that I assume ANSA get the Italian right!), so when they are in the field they are zucchini, but I assure you that the instant they get near a cooking pan they become zucchine, which is all I have ever seen on a restaurant menu!
Also - they are clearly undergrown marrows, and marrows are indisputably feminine, le zucche, so it is a bit odd that they start off masculine when they are underdeveloped........(did I really say that!!)
In reply to A newbie all over again! by Annec
Just to confuse things a bit further, according to the Italian/English dictionary I have at hand (Collins) you can either say "zucchina" (feminine noun) or "zucchino" (masculine noun) both meaning "courgette"... which is a French feminine noun used in English (no gender, please, you are British).....
So everybody is right.
Charles, I just loved your definition of gender combined with sex changes!!!! Hilarious!!!!!
In reply to A newbie all over again! by Annec
We too we sick over Christmas so missed out on the thousands of calories!I'm doing my best to make up though!
For New Year we had a big Chinese meal with loads of chilli, ginger and garlic.It did seem to clear up a few coughs and sniffles! Pasta with a ginger and chilli sauce would do the trick too I'd imagine.
In reply to A newbie all over again! by Annec
Chilli and ginger help to clear up congestion. Garlic is the best natural antibiotic. They are natural remedies that work.
[quote]By Sally: ".........(Note the spelling - "zucchini" lol. It should of course be zucchine)"
[/quote]
Don't know who told you that Sal.... It looks OK to me as it's used in the text.
This from De Mauro:
[B]zuc|chì|no, zuc|chì|no[/B]
s.m.
Frutto immaturo di una varietà di zucca (Cucurbita pepo italica) ampiamente usato come ortaggio e cucinato in vari modi:raccogliere gli [I]zucchini[/I], [I]zucchini[/I] fritti, lessi, frittata di [I]zucchini[/I]