broth
noun
- liquid food preparation
Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /bɹɔθ/ / /bɹɑθ/ / /bɹɒθ/
noun
Etymology: From Middle English broth, from Old English broþ (“broth”), from Proto-West Germanic *broþ (“broth”), from Proto-Germanic *bruþą (“broth”), from Proto-Indo-European *bʰrewh₁- (“to seethe, roil, brew”). Akin to Old English breowan (“to brew”), equivalent to brew + -th (abstract nominal suffix).
- Water in which food (meat, vegetable, etc.) has been boiled.
“A compound of galanga, cubebs, sparrow wort, cardamoms, nutmeg, gillyflowers, Indian thistle, laurel seeds, cloves, Persian pepper is made into a drink. Taken twice daily morning and night, in pigeon or fowl broth, preceded and followed by eater. The result, according to Arab tradition, is an effective aphrodisiac.”
- A soup made from broth and other ingredients such as vegetables, herbs or diced meat.