pączek
التعريفات والمعاني
== English ==
=== Etymology ===
Unadapted borrowing from Polish pączek, diminutive of pąk (“bud”). Doublet of ponchik.
=== Noun ===
pączek (plural pączki)
singular of pączki
== Polish ==
=== Etymology ===
From pąk + -ek.
=== Pronunciation ===
Rhymes: -ɔnt͡ʂɛk
Syllabification: pą‧czek
=== Noun ===
pączek m inan (diminutive pączuszek or pączuś, related adjective pączkowy)
diminutive of pąk
doughnut (deep-fried piece of dough or batter)
paczki (traditional Polish doughnut)
(botany, horticulture) bud (newly formed leaf or flower that has not yet unfolded)
Synonym: pąk
(biology) bud (small rounded body in the process of splitting from an organism, which may grow into a genetically identical new organism)
==== Declension ====
==== Derived terms ====
==== Related terms ====
==== Descendants ====
→ Belarusian: по́нчык (pónčyk)
→ English: paczek; (via plural) paczki
→ German: Pączki (via plural)
→ Latvian: pončiks
→ Lithuanian: (proscribed) pončka, pončkas
→ Russian: по́нчик (pónčik), по́нчикъ (pónčik) — pre-1918 spelling→ Armenian: պոնչիկ (pončʻik)→ Azerbaijani: ponçik→ English: ponchik→ Georgian: პონჩიკი (ṗončiḳi)→ Turkish: ponçik→ Yiddish: פּאָנטשיק (pontshik)
→ Ukrainian: по́нчик (pónčyk)
=== Further reading ===
“pączek”, in Wielki słownik języka polskiego[1] (in Polish), Instytut Języka Polskiego PAN
“pączek”, in Polish dictionaries at PWN[2] (in Polish)
Aleksander Saloni (1899), “ponczki”, in “Lud wiejski w okolicy Przeworska”, in M. Arct, E. Lubowski, editors, Wisła : miesięcznik gieograficzno-etnograficzny[3] (in Polish), volume 13, Warsaw: Artur Gruszecki, page 243