batida

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Portuguese batida (shaken (drink))

Noun

batida (plural batidas)

  1. a Brazilian cocktail made from cachaça, fruit juice, and sugar
    • 2007 March 9, Mike Sula, “Diversify Your Larder”, in Chicago Reader:
      Pepe's Food & Liquor [] carries a small stock of Brazilian goods, most importantly two kinds of cachaca, the rumlike sugarcane liquor critical to caipirinhas and batidas.

Anagrams


Italian

Etymology

From Portuguese batida (shaken (drink))

Noun

batida f (invariable)

  1. batida

Anagrams


Portuguese

Etymology

From bater.

Pronunciation

  • (file)
  • Hyphenation: ba‧ti‧da

Noun

batida f (plural batidas)

  1. act of beating
  2. beat (of music, or heartbeat)
    Synonym: batimento
  3. (militar) reconnaissance

Verb

batida

  1. feminine singular past participle of bater

Spanish

Etymology

From feminine past participle of batir.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /baˈtida/, [baˈt̪iða]

Adjective

batida

  1. Feminine singular of adjective batido.

Noun

batida f (plural batidas)

  1. (hunting) beating
  2. search
  3. raid
    Synonym: redada

Verb

batida f

  1. Feminine singular past participle of batir.
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