batida
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Portuguese batida (“shaken (drink)”).
Noun
batida (plural batidas)
- a Brazilian cocktail made from cachaça, fruit juice, and sugar
- 2007 March 9, Mike Sula, “Diversify Your Larder”, in Chicago Reader:
- Pepe's Food & Liquor […] carries a small stock of Brazilian goods, most importantly two kinds of cachaca, the rumlike sugarcane liquor critical to caipirinhas and batidas.
-
Anagrams
- Diabat, diabat
Italian
Etymology
Borrowed from Portuguese batida (“shaken (drink)”).
Noun
batida f (invariable)
- batida
Anagrams
- badati
Portuguese
Etymology
From bater.
Pronunciation
- Hyphenation: ba‧ti‧da
Noun
batida f (plural batidas)
- act of beating
- beat (of music, or heartbeat)
- Synonym: batimento
- (militar) reconnaissance
Participle
batida f sg
- feminine singular of batido
Spanish
Etymology
From feminine past participle of batir.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /baˈtida/ [baˈt̪i.ð̞a]
- Rhymes: -ida
- Syllabification: ba‧ti‧da
Noun
batida f (plural batidas)
- (hunting) beating
- search
- raid
- Synonym: redada
Adjective
batida
- feminine singular of batido
Participle
batida f sg
- feminine singular of batido
Further reading
- “batida”, in Diccionario de la lengua española, Vigésima tercera edición, Real Academia Española, 2014