bagel

See also: Bagel

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

Borrowed from Yiddish בייגל (beygl), ultimately from a diminutive of Middle High German bouc, boug- (ring, bracelet), from Old High German boug (ring), from Proto-Germanic *baugaz (ring); compare obsolete English bee (ring, metal ring, bracelet), Middle English bege, beh, Old English bēag, bēah, Old Frisian bāg, Old Saxon bōg, Middle Low German bōg, Old Norse baugr; also compare dialectal Austrian German Beugel, Beigel. See also beag.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈbeɪɡəl/, [ˈbe̞ɪ̯ɡɫ̩]
  • (file)
  • Rhymes: -eɪɡəl

Noun

bagel (plural bagels)

  1. A toroidal bread roll that is boiled before it is baked.
  2. (tennis, slang) A score of 6-0 in a set (after the shape of a bagel, which looks like a zero).
    • 2011 January 30, Piers Newbery, “Australian Open: Djokovic too good for Murray in final”, in BBC:
      The Scot, who had been close to a two-set deficit in his semi-final against David Ferrer, avoided the dreaded bagel by seeing off a set point at 5-0 down before finally breaking the Djokovic serve to love as he began to go for his shots with the set seemingly gone.
  3. (slang, ethnic slur, South Africa) An overly materialistic and selfish young Jewish man.

Synonyms

  • (spoiled young Jewish man): JAP (US, Autralia), kugel (South Africa)

Derived terms

Translations

See also

Verb

bagel (third-person singular simple present bagels, present participle bagelling, simple past and past participle bagelled)

  1. (tennis) Achieve a score of 6-0 in a tennis set.
  2. (sports) To hold an opponent to a score of zero.

References

  • bagel” in Douglas Harper, Online Etymology Dictionary, 2001–2019.

Anagrams


Dutch

Etymology

Borrowed from English bagel, from Yiddish בייגל (beygl).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈbeː.ɡəl/
  • Hyphenation: ba‧gel

Noun

bagel m (plural bagels, diminutive bageltje n)

  1. bagel (ring-shaped pastry)

French

Alternative forms

Etymology

From English bagel, from Yiddish בייגל (beygl); ultimately from Middle High German bouc, boug- (ring, bracelet), from Old High German boug (ring), from Proto-Germanic *baug- (ring) plus *-il (noun suffix).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ba.ɡɛl/, /be.ɡœl/

Noun

bagel m (plural bagels)

  1. bagel (toroidal bread roll)

Portuguese

Etymology

From English bagel, from Yiddish בייגל (beygl); ultimately from Middle High German bouc, boug- (ring, bracelet), from Old High German boug (ring), from Proto-Germanic *baug- (ring) plus *-il (noun suffix).

Pronunciation

Noun

bagel m (plural bagels)

  1. bagel (toroidal bread roll)

Spanish

Alternative forms

Etymology

From English bagel, from Yiddish בייגל (beygl); ultimately from Middle High German bouc, boug- (ring, bracelet), from Old High German boug (ring), from Proto-Germanic *baug- (ring) plus *-il (noun suffix).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /baˈɡel/, [baˈɣel]

Noun

bagel m (plural bagels)

  1. bagel (toroidal bread roll)
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