Rosine
See also: rosine
German
Etymology
From Middle High German rosīn, *rosīne, from Middle Dutch rosīne (whence Dutch rozijn), from Picard Old French roisin, from Old French raisin (whence also French raisin and English raisin), from Late Latin racīmus, from Latin racēmus.
Within German, the word was originally chiefly Low and Central German, while Upper German dialects used the word Zibebe. It is therefore likely that the modern form with a monophthong (instead of expected Roseine, which does occur dialectally) was influenced by Middle Low German rosīne. An assocation with Latinate and French words in -ine is also possible.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ʁoˈziːnə/
Audio (file) - Hyphenation: Ro‧si‧ne
Declension
Synonyms
- Zibebe (Austria; dialectal in southern Germany)
Hyponyms
- Korinthe
- Sultanine
Derived terms
- Rosinenbomber
- Rosinenkuchen
- Rosinenpickerei
Further reading
- Rosine in Duden online
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