Vinegar (vin aigre = sour wine)
The word, acerbic, comes from the Latin word, acere and means to be sour. Acidic is another term for something that is sour.
sour wine, or vinegar, is called 'du vinaigre' in French.
Sour cream is "crème aigre" in French, "crème sûre" in Canadian French.
"Sour cherry tree" is an English equivalent of "cerisier aigre" (Prunus cerasus).The French word "cerisier" is a masculine noun. Its singular definite article is "le" ("the"), and its singular indefinite article "un" ("a, one"). The adjective "aigre" means "sour, bitter."Together, the pronunciation is "seh-ree-zyeh eh-gruh."
aigre /ɛgʀ/
it comes from the latin word vineraes It comes from the Latin word VINUM meaning wine and AIGRE, meaning sour.
The word "brusque" comes from the French word "brusque," meaning "abrupt" or "blunt," which is derived from the Italian word "brusco," meaning "sour" or "sharp."
from latin acidus or french acere meaning to be sour
The word, acerbic, comes from the Latin word, acere and means to be sour. Acidic is another term for something that is sour.
sour wine, or vinegar, is called 'du vinaigre' in French.
Sour cream is "crème aigre" in French, "crème sûre" in Canadian French.
It comes from the French "vinaigre", which is the two words "vin" (wine) and "aigre" (sour) put together. The preferred vinegar for French dressing is naturally aged red wine vinegar. Most vinegars are now aged industrially artificially in just a few hours instead of a few weeks, so they taste more like acetic acid than real vinegar. Growing your own vinegar with a "mother" of vinegar is a fantastic experience to comprehend that French meaning...
to make sour or more sour
"Sour" in French is spelled "acide."
"Sour cherry tree" is an English equivalent of "cerisier aigre" (Prunus cerasus).The French word "cerisier" is a masculine noun. Its singular definite article is "le" ("the"), and its singular indefinite article "un" ("a, one"). The adjective "aigre" means "sour, bitter."Together, the pronunciation is "seh-ree-zyeh eh-gruh."
"Sour cherry tree" is an English equivalent of "griottier" (Prunus cerasus).The French word "grottier" is a masculine noun. Its singular definite article is "le" ("the"). Its singular indefinite article is "un" ("a, one").The pronunciation is "gryoh-tyeh."
The word "sauerkraut" comes from German, combining "sauer" meaning sour and "kraut" meaning cabbage. It is a traditional German dish made from fermented cabbage.