See also: Mici, miči, míci, and míči

English edit

 mititei on Wikipedia

Etymology edit

From Romanian mici, plural of mic (small).

Noun edit

mici (usually uncountable, plural mici)

  1. Mititei (a popular Romanian dish).
    • 2018 November 8, Susanne Fowler, “36 Hours in Bucharest”, in The New York Times[1]:
      Then join a picnic table of shoppers at the Terasa Obor beer garden for a paper plate of mici (grilled meatballs, at 2.5 lei each), a bread roll (.5 lei) and a slather of spicy mustard.
    • 2018, Roxanne Veletzos, The Girl They Left Behind, New York, NY: Atria Publishing Group, →ISBN, page 84:
      “Come,” he said. “Come with me. I know a place where we could get some mici, even at this late hour. I'm hungry, too, you see, and I could use the company.”

Ainu edit

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

mici (Kana spelling ミチ)

  1. father

Synonyms edit

Coordinate terms edit

  • hapo (mother)
  • po (son)

Italian edit

Noun edit

mici m

  1. plural of micio

Anagrams edit

Latvian edit

Noun edit

mici f

  1. accusative/instrumental singular of mice

Romanian edit

Pronunciation edit

Etymology 1 edit

Adjective edit

mici

  1. nominative/accusative masculine/feminine/neuter plural of mic

Etymology 2 edit

From the above.

Noun edit

mici

  1. (in the plural) Romanian grilled minced meat rolls
    Synonym: mititei