soupe
See also: soupé
French
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /sup/
audio (file)
Etymology 1
From Middle French souppe, from Old French sope, supe, soupe, from Late Latin suppa (“sopped bread”), from Proto-Germanic *supô.
Noun
soupe f (plural soupes)
- soup
- La soupe est trop chaude.
- The soup is too hot.
Derived terms
- c'est dans les vieux pots qu'on fait la meilleure soupe
- comme un cheveu sur la soupe
- cracher dans la soupe
- cuiller à soupe
- cuillère à soupe
- plein de soupe
- sonner la soupe
- soupe au lait
- soupe populaire
- souper
- trempé comme une soupe
Descendants
- → Dutch: soep
- → Greek: σούπα (soúpa)
- → Limburgish:
- Tsupp (Eupen)
- → Persian: سوپ (sup)
- → Romanian: supă
- → Russian: суп (sup), супъ (sup)
- → Armenian: սուպ (sup)
- → Vietnamese: xúp
Etymology 2
See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.
Verb
soupe
- inflection of souper:
- first/third-person singular present indicative/subjunctive
- second-person singular imperative
Further reading
- “soupe”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
Middle English
Etymology 1
From Old French supe, from Late Latin suppa.
Alternative forms
- sowpe
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈsuːp(ə)/
Noun
soupe (plural soupes)
- A meal consisting of sopped bread with soup, stock, gravy or broth poured over it
- soup, broth
Related terms
- soupen (“to dine”)
Descendants
- English: soup
References
- “sǒupe, n.(1).”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 2018-03-29.
Verb
soupe
- Alternative form of soupen (“to swallow”)
Verb
soupe
- Alternative form of soupen (“to dine”)
Norman
Alternative forms
- souope (continental Normandy)
Etymology
From Old French souppe, sope, from Late Latin suppa (“sopped bread”), from Proto-Germanic *supô.
Pronunciation
Audio (Jersey) (file)
Noun
soupe f (plural soupes)
- (Guernsey, Jersey) soup, broth
- 2013 March 1, Geraint Jennings, “Mar martello”, in The Town Crier, page 20:
- Trop d'couques gâtent la soupe sans doute, et ché s'sait mus d'penser coumme tchi agrandi la pâte ou affêtchi la soupe au run d'hèrtchîngni tréjous pouor la manniéthe d'la cop'thie, ou la manniéthe dé couté ou d'dréch'rêsse.
- Too many cooks no doubt spoil the broth, and it'd be better to think about how to make the pie bigger or thicken the soup instead of always arguing over how to carry out the cutting or what type of knife or ladle to use.
-
Derived terms
- p'tite soupe (Jersey)
- soupe d'andgulle (Jersey), soupe dé paissaon (Guernsey)
- soupe dé caboche
- soupe dé navets
- soupe dé pais (Jersey), soupe dé peis (Guernsey)
Old French
Noun
soupe f (oblique plural soupes, nominative singular soupe, nominative plural soupes)
- Alternative form of supe
- soupe des naveux
- turnip soup