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Origin of cerveza

March 28th, 2009 | by Nick |

I love this page Etymologically Speaking…with its curious list origins of English, French, German and Spanish words. Shame he or she hasn’t written any more.

This is what it says about cerveza:

This term, which means “beer” in Spanish, originally came from the medieval French word cervoise. For its part, the French term origianlly stemmed from the Gallo-Roman (that is, ancient French-Latin dialect) word cerevisia, which was used in honor of Ceres, the Roman goddess of the harvest. It is interesting to note that just about the time that the Spanish were adopting the term cerveza (aroung 1482), the French started to drop cervoise in favor of the term biere– from the Germanic term Bier (from the Latin biber, “to drink”), which was the term that was more popular in northern Europe, where the climate was more favorable to the production of the grains that were used to make the beverage. [(A footnote: the reader might be wondering what term was used in Spain before the adoption of cerveza. Before 1482, the inhabitants of the Iberian Peninsula had used the completely-unrelated ancient Iberian word ceria or celia, meaning "fermented wheat.")(Footnote #2: The English term ale comes from the Scandinavian term for beer, oel. Although oel collectively refers to all types of beer, you beer purists out there know that the English term ale came to refer only to beer produced using the "top" fermentation process. Beer produced using the "bottom" fermentation process is called lager.)].

Posted in Etymology of Spanish words, Food and drink, Spanish language | Tags: Ceres, ceria, history of beer in Spai, history of Spanish beer, origen de cerveza, Roman goddess of the harvest | Nick -->

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    • Words and concepts in Spanish that don’t exist in English
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    • About - Spanish history and culture
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      • ABC newspaper
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      • Arabic in Spain
      • autarky in Spain
      • akelarre - witches’ sabbath
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      • Aljama
      • Artesonado
      • alminar
    • Culture and history of Spain b
      • Bakalao music
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      • Contra Franco vivíamos mejor
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      • Jota - dance
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      Words and concepts in Spanish that don't exist in English
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      Mojácar used to be a town of around 6,000 people in as far back as 1870. It maintained this number of inhabitants until round about 1900 when, slowly, numbers began to fall, speeding its descent in the 1930s. Through the various local vicissitudes of the drop in the local water-table, the end of the de-forestation, a peculiar plague of locusts in 1901, the end of the mines in the 1920s and the troubled times of the Civil War, the area in general eventually became depopulated with mass emigrations to Barcelona, Algeria, Germany and even Argentina, and Mojácar itself began its long descent into what was, by 1960, a moribund village of just 600 souls. Read complete post on Spanish Shilling

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