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Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Wikipedia. Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low-quality.
Various sayings and rhymes about the kolach have also entered the Polish language and culture over the centuries that it was baked, showing the importance of this sweet bread and the rituals surrounding it as an ancient tradition of the Polish nation [25] as well as among the Rusyn minority that has inhabited parts of Poland throughout its ...
This list contains Germanic elements of the English language which have a close corresponding Latinate form. The correspondence is semantic—in most cases these words are not cognates, but in some cases they are doublets, i.e., ultimately derived from the same root, generally Proto-Indo-European, as in cow and beef, both ultimately from PIE *gʷōus.
Kolach is the Slavonic term for a number of traditional baked products, such as: . Kolach (bread), a circular bread, most often made as a sweet dish Slavski kolač, a Serbian variant of the kolach, made for the celebration of Slava
Kürtőskalács (Hungarian: [ˈkyrtøːʃkɒlaːt͡ʃ] ⓘ; sometimes improperly rendered as kurtosh kolach; Romanian: colac/cozonac secuiesc; German: Baumstriezel) is a spit cake specific to Hungarians from Transylvania (Romania), more specifically the Székelys. [1]
A pair of siblings have reignited a debate over cake — specifically, what it means to be a chocolate cake. In December, Gia Cooper posted a video to TikTok, and later to Instagram, where the ...
A klobasnek (Czech klobásník / ˌ k l oʊ ˈ b æ s n ɪ k /, plural klobásníky, meaning "a roll made of sweet, spun dough known as koláč made and often filled with klobása or other fillings") is a chiefly American Czech savory finger food. [1]
Some German words are used in English narrative to identify that the subject expressed is in German, e.g., Frau, Reich. As languages, English and German descend from the common ancestor language West Germanic and further back to Proto-Germanic; because of this, some English words are essentially identical to their German lexical counterparts ...