Please pronounce this word for megreenspun.com : LUSENET : Countryside : One Thread |
The word is - terroir - means "the taste of the place from which they come.Like with wine, cheese or honey. The soil of a particular area imparts a distinct characteristic to a wine. The plants of a particular area that are consumed my cattle, sheep, goats - will give the cheese made from their milk a special essence. Honey from different blossoms gives uniqueness, - all are recognizable by experts in those different foods.
That word - terroir - how do you say it?
-- homestead2 (homestead@localnetplus.com), March 11, 2001
just moved it to the top, hoping to get an answer
-- homestead2 (homestead@localnetplus.com), March 11, 2001.
One entry found for goût de terroir.Main Entry: goût de ter·roir Pronunciation: gü-d&-te-rw[a']r Usage: foreign term Etymology: French : taste of the earth
-- Jim (catchthesun@yahoo.com), March 11, 2001.
Great word, best used in written form...at least for this non-native French speaker!
-- Anne (HealthyTouch101@wildmail.com), March 11, 2001.
tuh-rwahr
-- jonesey (jonesey@bigfoot.com), March 11, 2001.
tare-WAHR
-- Leslie A. (lesliea@home.com), March 11, 2001.
no "r" sound in the first syllable: teh-WAH accent on the second syllable.the French r here is gutteral-hard to do without practice! You can add a gutteral r on the end of the first syllable-just make sure it is barely audible.
the ending r is silent. (this is a masculine form) if it were feminine it would be spelled with a an -re on the end and then you would pronounce it.
Hope that helps=I studied French for several years-much easier than our confusing english (american at that!)
-- sarah (heartsongacres@juno.com), March 12, 2001.
Thank you all. This is so great. I knew I would get the answers on this board.I want to have cheese workshops in the future. (must organize my life considerably first.) I want to share with people why we won't all make the same cheese, even though we may use the same recipes.
I saw that word used on a cheesemaker's forum this week and am intrigued by this phenomenom of terroir. I thought it was going to be a pistol to pronounce - and I can see it sure is.
-- homestead2 (homestead@localnetplus.com), March 12, 2001.