Borrowed from Medieval Latin focacea, a derivative of focus (“hearth, fireplace”), in the meaning "hearth bread" (panis focācius).
погача • (pogača) f
singular | plural | |
---|---|---|
indefinite | погача (pogača) | погачи (pogači) |
definite unspecified | погачата (pogačata) | погачите (pogačite) |
definite proximal | погачава (pogačava) | погачиве (pogačive) |
definite distal | погачана (pogačana) | погачине (pogačine) |
vocative | погачо (pogačo) | погачи (pogači) |
From Bulgarian пога́ча (pogáča) or Serbo-Croatian pògača / по̀гача, Medieval Latin focacea, a derivative of focus (“hearth, fireplace”), in the meaning "hearth bread" (panis focācius). Compare with пога́ч (pogáč).
пога́ча • (pogáča) f inan (genitive пога́чи, nominative plural пога́чи, genitive plural пога́ч)
From Proto-Slavic *pogača, from Medieval Latin focacea, focacia, a derivative of focus (“hearth, fireplace”), in the meaning "hearth bread" (panis focācius). Cognate with Italian focaccia (“a type of flat bread with toppings”).
по̀гача f (Latin spelling pògača)