menudo

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Spanish menudo. Doublet of minute.

Noun

menudo

  1. A traditional Mexican soup made with tripe and chili peppers.
  2. A traditional stew from the Philippines, made with sliced pork and calf's liver in tomato sauce.

Cebuano

Etymology

From Spanish menudo, from Latin minūtus (small, little). Doublet of minuto and menu.

Pronunciation

  • Hyphenation: me‧nu‧do

Verb

menudo

  1. to sell the smaller contents of an item separately

Noun

menudo

  1. the sale of such item
  2. an item sold this way

Spanish

Etymology

From Latin minūtus (small, little). Doublet of minuto, a borrowing.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /meˈnudo/, [meˈnuðo]

Adjective

menudo (feminine singular menuda, masculine plural menudos, feminine plural menudas)

  1. what a (intensifier, followed by a noun)
    ¡Menudo capullo!What a plonker!
  2. small, tiny
  3. insignificant

Derived terms

Noun

menudo m (plural menudos)

A bowl of menudo (soup)
  1. (Mexico, cooking) a traditional Mexican spicy soup made with tripe
  2. (Mexico, cooking) tripes (used as food)

Synonyms

Descendants


Tagalog

Noun

menudo

  1. dish of cubes of pork and liver cooked with potato cubes and with tomatoes and spices
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