释义 |
matzo
mat·zo also mat·zoh M0157100 (mät′sə, -sō′, -sô′, mät-sä′)n. pl. mat·zos also mat·zohs (mät′səz, -sōs′) or mat·zot or mat·zoth (mät-sôt′) A flat, usually brittle piece of unleavened bread, eaten especially during Passover. [Yiddish matse, from Hebrew maṣṣâ; see mṣ́ṣ́ in Semitic roots.]matzo (ˈmætˈsəʊ) or matzoh; matza (ˈmætsə) or matzahn, pl matzos, matzohs, matzas, matzahs or matzoth (Hebrew maˈtsɔt) (Judaism) a brittle very thin biscuit of unleavened bread, traditionally eaten during Passover[from Hebrew matsāh]mat•zo or mat•zoh (ˈmɑt sə) n., pl. -zos or -zohs (-səz) -zoth, -zot, -zos (-soʊt, -soʊs) unleavened bread in the form of large wafers, eaten by Jews during Passover. [1840–50; < Yiddish matse < Hebrew maṣṣāh] ThesaurusNoun | 1. | matzo - brittle flat bread eaten at Passovermatzah, matzoh, unleavened breadbread, breadstuff, staff of life - food made from dough of flour or meal and usually raised with yeast or baking powder and then baked | Translationsmatzo
matzo, matzoh, matza, matzah a brittle very thin biscuit of unleavened bread, traditionally eaten during Passover Matzo (Unleavened Bread) thin wafer of unleavened dough; Jews eat matzos during Passover instead of leavened bread, which is prohibited at that time. matzoenUS
Synonyms for matzonoun brittle flat bread eaten at PassoverSynonyms- matzah
- matzoh
- unleavened bread
Related Words- bread
- breadstuff
- staff of life
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