roti

See also: rotí, ròti, rôti, and roți

English

A plain Indian roti.

Etymology

From Hindi रोटी (roṭī) and Urdu روٹی‎ (roṭī), from Sanskrit रोटिका (roṭikā, bread).

Pronunciation

Noun

roti (usually uncountable, plural rotis)

  1. A kind of unleavened flatbread commonly consumed in South Asia and the Caribbean.
    • 2007, January 27, “Dennis Hevesi”, in Carlos Lezama, 83, Dies; Shaped West Indian Parade:
      Along the sidewalks, hundreds of vendors hawked everything from commemorative T-shirts to rum to roti, the breadlike Caribbean pastry stuffed with pungently barbecued goat or chicken.
    Nepalis eat sweet fried rice-flour doughnuts called sel roti.
    Synonym: chapati

Translations

Anagrams


Catalan

Verb

roti

  1. third-person singular imperative form of rotar
  2. third-person singular present subjunctive form of rotar
  3. first-person singular present subjunctive form of rotar

Dutch

Pronunciation

  • (file)

Noun

roti m (plural roti's, diminutive rotietje n)

  1. roti

Ido

Noun

roti

  1. plural of roto

Indonesian

Etymology

From Malay roti, from Tamil ரொட்டி (roṭṭi), Hindi रोटी (roṭī), from Sanskrit रोटी (roṭī).

Noun

roti (plural roti-roti, first-person possessive rotiku, second-person possessive rotimu, third-person possessive rotinya)

  1. bread (baked dough made from cereals)

Italian

Verb

roti

  1. second-person singular present indicative of rotare
  2. first-person singular present subjunctive of rotare
  3. second-person singular present subjunctive of rotare
  4. third-person singular present subjunctive of rotare
  5. third-person singular imperative of rotare

Anagrams


Malay

Etymology

Borrowed from Tamil ரொட்டி (roṭṭi), Hindi रोटी (roṭī), from Sanskrit रोटी (roṭī).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /roti/
  • Rhymes: -ti, -i

Noun

roti (Jawi spelling روتي, plural roti-roti, informal first-person possessive rotiku, informal second-person possessive rotimu, third-person possessive rotinya)

  1. bread (baked dough made from cereals)

Middle English

Verb

roti

  1. Alternative form of roten (to rot)

Nalca

Etymology

From Indonesian roti, from Malay roti, from Tamil ரொட்டி (roṭṭi), from Sanskrit रोटी (roṭī).

Noun

roti

  1. bread (baked dough made from cereals)

Romanian

Etymology

From roată (wheel).

Verb

a roti (third-person singular present rotește, past participle rotit) 4th conj.

  1. to rotate, spin, turn around
  2. to roll

Conjugation

Synonyms

See also


Spanish

Noun

roti m (plural rotis)

  1. roti
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