mousse
See also: moussé
English
Etymology
French mousse (“foam, froth”), from Old French mosse (“moss”), from Frankish or Old Dutch mosa (“moss”), from Proto-Germanic *musą (“moss, bog, marsh”). More at moss.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /muːs/
- Rhymes: -uːs
Audio (US) (file) - Homophone: moose
Noun
mousse (countable and uncountable, plural mousses)
- An airy pudding served chilled, particularly chocolate mousse.
- A savory dish, of meat or seafood, containing gelatin.
- A styling cream used for hair.
- He slicked his hair back with mousse, but the cowlick still stuck up.
- A stable emulsion of water and oil that is created by wave action churning the water where an oil spill occurs.
- 1987, D.F. Boesch & N.N. Rabalais, Long-term Environmental Effects of Offshore Oil and Gas Development, →ISBN:
- Pretreatment of oil or sea water with dispersants or demulsifiers generally inhibits laboratory mousse formation with most of the oils and petroleum products tested (Berridge et al. , 1968b; Bridie et al. , 1980a,b).
- 1993, John R. Clayton, James R. Payne, & John S. Farlow, Oil Spill Dispersants: Mechanisms of Action and Laboratory Tests, →ISBN, page 21:
- A number of investigators have shown that the starting composition of a parent oil can have a major influence on its predisposittion to form stable water-in-oil emulsions (mousse). For example, the presence of natural surfactants in the wax, resin, and asphaltene fractions of oils has been positively correlated with the tendency to form mousse.
- 1994, Dana Stabenow, A Cold-Blooded Business, →ISBN, page 50:
- When it washed ashore in Prince William Sound, the crude came in sticky gobs, in tar balls, in what they called mousse, crude whipped to a froth in the action of the sea.
- 2009, Elspeth Leacock, The Exxon Valdez Oil Spill, →ISBN, page 37:
- However, the sticky mousse clogged all of the skimmers, even the Vaydaghubsky. If all these skimmers had been on-site during the first three days of calm weather, before the oil was churned into mousse, they could have made a real difference
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Descendants
- → Irish: mús
Translations
dessert
meat dish
Finnish
Pronunciation
Declension
Inflection of mousse (Kotus type 8/nalle, no gradation) | |||
---|---|---|---|
nominative | mousse | mousset | |
genitive | moussen | moussejen | |
partitive | moussea | mousseja | |
illative | mousseen | mousseihin | |
singular | plural | ||
nominative | mousse | mousset | |
accusative | nom. | mousse | mousset |
gen. | moussen | ||
genitive | moussen | moussejen mousseinrare | |
partitive | moussea | mousseja | |
inessive | moussessa | mousseissa | |
elative | moussesta | mousseista | |
illative | mousseen | mousseihin | |
adessive | moussella | mousseilla | |
ablative | mousselta | mousseilta | |
allative | mousselle | mousseille | |
essive | moussena | mousseina | |
translative | mousseksi | mousseiksi | |
instructive | — | moussein | |
abessive | moussetta | mousseitta | |
comitative | — | mousseineen |
French
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /mus/
audio (file) - Rhymes: -us
Etymology 1
Originally from a dialect south of the Loire, from Vulgar Latin *muttius (compare Occitan mos), of Gaulish origin, or alternatively from Latin mutilus (compare Italian mozzo).
Derived terms
Etymology 2
From Old French mosse (“moss”), from Frankish *mosa (“moss”), from Proto-Germanic *musą (“moss”).
For the culinary sense one might suspect influence by Dutch moes, German Mus (both “mush, purée”). However, the metaphorical use of mousse for “foam” is older and the culinary sense can thence be derived without difficulty.

mousse
Noun
mousse f (plural mousses)
Derived terms
Verb
mousse
Further reading
- “mousse” in le Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
Hungarian
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [ˈmusː]
- Hyphenation: mousse
Declension
Inflection (stem in -o-, back harmony) | ||
---|---|---|
singular | plural | |
nominative | mousse | mousse-ok |
accusative | mousse-t | mousse-okat |
dative | mousse-nak | mousse-oknak |
instrumental | mousse-szal | mousse-okkal |
causal-final | mousse-ért | mousse-okért |
translative | mousse-szá | mousse-okká |
terminative | mousse-ig | mousse-okig |
essive-formal | mousse-ként | mousse-okként |
essive-modal | — | — |
inessive | mousse-ban | mousse-okban |
superessive | mousse-on | mousse-okon |
adessive | mousse-nál | mousse-oknál |
illative | mousse-ba | mousse-okba |
sublative | mousse-ra | mousse-okra |
allative | mousse-hoz | mousse-okhoz |
elative | mousse-ból | mousse-okból |
delative | mousse-ról | mousse-okról |
ablative | mousse-tól | mousse-októl |
Possessive forms of mousse | ||
---|---|---|
possessor | single possession | multiple possessions |
1st person sing. | mousse-om | mousse-aim |
2nd person sing. | mousse-od | mousse-aid |
3rd person sing. | mousse-a | mousse-ai |
1st person plural | mousse-unk | mousse-aink |
2nd person plural | mousse-otok | mousse-aitok |
3rd person plural | mousse-uk | mousse-aik |
Derived terms
- csokoládémousse
Norman
Pronunciation
Audio (file)
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