Central Franconian edit

Etymology edit

From French manger, from Middle French manger, from Old French mengier, from Late Latin manducāre (to chew, devour), present active infinitive of manducō, from Latin mandō. Compare Italian mangiare, Norman maungier and mougier, Gallo mangier, Picard minger, Bourguignon maingé, Franco-Provençal mengiér, Occitan manjar, Corsican manghjà, Romanian mânca.

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): /mɑŋʒeːʀ/, [ˌmɑŋˈʒeː.ʀ̝̊ə]

Verb edit

mangzjere (third-person present tense mangzjeert, past tense mangzjeret, present participle mangzjerend or mangzjerens, past participle mangzjeerd)

  1. (Kirchröadsj Ripuarian, transitive) to eat
  2. (Kirchröadsj Ripuarian, intransitive) to eat
    Zoeëlang vier jód mangzjere kanne, zint vier jezónk.
    As long as we can eat good, we are healthy.

Derived terms edit