English edit

Etymology edit

The sense referring to a serving of Cincinnati chili was coined in the 1920s by Tom and John Kiradjieff, Slavic-Macedonian immigrants to Cincinnati, for their Empress Chili chain.[1]

Adjective edit

four-way (not comparable)

  1. (attributive) relating to four different directions.
    a four-way stop

Derived terms edit

Noun edit

four-way (plural four-ways)

 
four-way chili
  1. (Cincinnati) A serving of Cincinnati chili with spaghetti, cheese, and onions or sometimes beans.

Coordinate terms edit

References edit

  1. ^ Woellert, Dann (2013) The Authentic History of Cincinnati Chili[1], The History Press, →ISBN, retrieved November 20, 2015, page 29:
    Coming from such a cultural crossroads, the brothers Kiradjieff spoke Macedonian, Bulgarian, Greek, Turkish and English. But they also created another language: the chili lingo that is still used today when ordering at a chili parlor. To aid in ordering, 'chili spaghetti with cheese on top' was shortened to 'three-way'. This was done to let servers shout their orders quickly to the cooks during a busy lunchtime.