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in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
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Translingual
Symbol
fry
( international standards ) ISO 639-2 & ISO 639-3 language code for West Frisian .
English
Pronunciation
Etymology 1
From Middle English fryen , borrowed from Old French frire , from Latin frīgō ( “ to roast, fry ” ) , from Proto-Indo-European *bʰer- . Cognate with Ancient Greek φρύγω ( phrúgō , “ I roast, bake ” ) , Sanskrit भृज्जति ( bhṛjjati , “ to roast, grill, fry ” ) , भृग् ( bhṛg , “ the crackling of fire ” ) . Replaced native Middle English hirsten , from Old English hierstan ( “ to fry ” ) .
Verb
Eggs, tomatoes and mushrooms being fried in a frying pan
fry (third-person singular simple present fries , present participle frying , simple past and past participle fried )
A method of cooking food.
( transitive ) To cook (something) in hot fat .
I am frying the eggs.
You tellin' me a shrimp fried this rice?
( intransitive ) To cook in hot fat .
The eggs are frying .
( obsolete ) To simmer ; to boil .[ 1]
1697 , Virgil , “The Seventh Book of the Æneis ”, in John Dryden , transl., The Works of Virgil: Containing His Pastorals, Georgics, and Æneis. , London: Jacob Tonson , , →OCLC :With crackling flames a caldron fries .
To be affected by extreme heat or current .
( intransitive , colloquial ) To suffer because of too much heat .
You'll fry if you go out in this sun with no sunblock on.
( chiefly US , transitive , intransitive , slang ) To execute , or be executed , by the electric chair .
He's guilty of murder: he's going to fry .
( transitive , informal ) To destroy (something, usually electronic ) with excessive heat , voltage , or current .
If you apply that much voltage, you'll fry the resistor.
Synonyms
Coordinate terms
( be executed in the eletric chair ) : swing
Derived terms
Translations
to cook (something) in hot fat or oil
Arabic: قَلَى ( qalā )
Armenian: տապակել (hy) ( tapakel )
Aromanian: frigu
Assamese:
Central: ভাজা ( bhaza )
Eastern: ভজা ( bhoza )
Azerbaijani: qızartmaq (az) , qovurmaq (az)
Basque: frijitu
Belarusian: сма́жыць impf ( smážycʹ )
Biatah Bidayuh: gureng
Bulgarian: пържа (bg) ( pǎrža )
Burmese: ကြော် (my) ( krau )
Catalan: fregir (ca)
Chinese:
Cantonese: 煎 ( zin1 ) , 炒 ( caau2 )
Mandarin: 煎 (zh) ( jiān ) , 炒 (zh) ( chǎo )
Cornish: fria
Czech: smažit (cs) impf , usmažit pf
Dalmatian: fregur
Danish: stege , brase
Dongxiang: khuru
Dutch: bakken (nl) , braden (nl)
Esperanto: friti (eo)
Estonian: praadima
Finnish: paistaa (fi) , käristää (fi)
French: faire frire
Galician: frixir (gl) , fritir (gl) , estrelar (gl) ( eggs )
Georgian: please add this translation if you can
German: braten (de)
Greek: τηγανίζω (el) ( tiganízo )
Hebrew: טיגן \ טִגֵּן (he) ( tigén )
Hungarian: süt (hu)
Irish: frioch
Italian: friggere (it)
Japanese: (油 で)揚げる ( あげる , ageru) , 炒る (ja) ( iru ) , 煎る (ja) ( iru )
Khmer: ជៀន (km) ( ciən ) , ឆា (km) ( cʰaa )
Korean: 튀기다 (ko) ( twigida )
Kurdish:
Central Kurdish: سوور کردنەوە ( sûr kirdnewe )
Northern Kurdish: biraştin (ku) , qelandin (ku)
Lao: ຂົ້ວ (lo) ( khūa ) , ຈຶນ ( chưn )
Latgalian: cept
Latin: frīgō
Latvian: cept (lv)
Lithuanian: kepti (lt)
Macedonian: пржи ( prži )
Malay: goreng (ms)
Malayalam: വറുക്കുക (ml) ( vaṟukkuka )
Maori: parai
Middle English: fryen
Miyako: please add this translation if you can
Mongolian: шарах (mn) ( šarax ) , хуурах (mn) ( xuurax )
Norman: fricachi ( Jersey ) , fricachier ( Guernsey )
Norwegian: steke (no)
Occitan: fregir (oc)
Okinawan: please add this translation if you can
Persian: ویجیدن
Polish: smażyć (pl) impf , usmażyć (pl) pf
Portuguese: fritar (pt)
Romanian: frige (ro) , prăji (ro)
Russian: жа́рить (ru) ( žáritʹ ) ( imperfective ) , поджа́рить (ru) ( podžáritʹ ) ( perfective )
Sanskrit: भृज्जति ( bhṛjjati )
Sardinian: fríere
Scottish Gaelic: praidhig
Serbo-Croatian:
Cyrillic: пр̏жити impf
Roman: pȑžiti (sh) impf
Shuswap: p’íxem
Slovak: smažiť impf
Sorbian:
Lower Sorbian: pjac
Upper Sorbian: pjec impf , wopjec pf , spjec pf , popjec pf
Spanish: freír (es)
Swedish: steka (sv)
Sylheti: ꠜꠣꠎꠣ ( báza )
Tamil: வறு (ta) ( vaṟu )
Tedim Chin: kang
Telugu: వేపు (te) ( vēpu )
Tetum: sona
Thai: ทอด (th) ( tɔ̂ɔt )
Tibetan: please add this translation if you can
Turkish: kızartmak (tr)
Ukrainian: сма́жити impf ( smážyty ) , підсма́жити pf ( pidsmážyty )
Venetan: frìxer , frìxar , frìzar , frìzer , frìxere , frìzare
Vietnamese: chiên (vi)
Volapük: loetön (vo)
Welsh: ffrio (cy)
White Hmong: please add this translation if you can
Yaeyama: please add this translation if you can
Yiddish: פּרעגלען ( preglen )
Zhuang: please add this translation if you can
Zou: keng
(intransitive) cook in hot fat or oil
suffer because of too much heat
Noun
fry (plural fries )
( usually in the plural , fries , chiefly Canada and US , cooking ) A fried piece of cut potato .
Synonyms: chip , french fry
( Ireland , British , cooking ) A meal of fried sausages, bacon, eggs, etc.
Synonym: fry-up
( Australia , New Zealand , cooking ) The liver of a lamb .
Synonym: liver
( usually in the plural , fries , US , cooking ) A lamb or calf testicle .
Synonyms: prairie oyster , Rocky Mountain oyster , tendergroin
( colloquial , archaic ) A state of excitement .
to be in a fry
Derived terms
Translations
meal of fried sausages, bacon, etc
Etymology 2
From Middle English frie ( “ spawn of fish, young or small fish, offspring, progeny, children ” ) , probably from Old Norse frjó ( “ seed, semen ” ) , from Proto-Germanic *fraiwą ( “ seed, semen, offspring ” ) , from Proto-Indo-European *(s)per- , *(s)prey- ( “ to strew, sow ” ) . Cognate with Icelandic frjó ( “ pollen, seed ” ) , Icelandic fræ ( “ seed ” ) , Swedish frö ( “ seed, embryo, grain, germ ” ) , Danish and Norwegian frø ( “ seed ” ) , Gothic 𐍆𐍂𐌰𐌹𐍅 ( fraiw , “ seed ” ) . Likely merging with Old French froiz , froie ( “ spawn, spawning ” ) , from froier , freier ( “ to spawn ” ) , from Latin fricō ( “ to rub ” ) . The Middle English is attested earlier than the terms in Old French, and the Anglo-Norman forms frie , fry are borrowings from the Middle English.
Noun
fry (uncountable )
Young fish ; fishlings .
1644 , John Milton , Areopagitica :it is not possible for man to sever the wheat from the tares, the good fish from the other frie ; that must be the Angels Ministery at the end of mortall things.
( now chiefly UK dialectal ) Offspring ; progeny ; children ; brood .
( archaic ) A swarm, especially of something small.
a fry of children
( UK dialectal ) The spawn of frogs .
Derived terms
Translations
Etymology 3
Dialectal, of obscure origin. Perhaps related to or a corruption of frith ( “ a wood, forest", also "brushwood, wattle ” ) , from Middle English fryth , frith ( “ forest, woodland, a fence of brush or wattle, hedge ” ) .
Noun
fry (plural fries )
A kind of sieve .
A drain , usually made of brushwood .
Verb
fry (third-person singular simple present fries , present participle frying , simple past and past participle fried )
( transitive , dialectal ) To make a brushwood drain.
References
Middle English
Noun
fry
Alternative form of frie