coleslaw

pronunciation

How to pronounce coleslaw in British English: UK [ˈkəʊlslɔ:]word uk audio image

How to pronounce coleslaw in American English: US [ˈkoʊlslɔ] word us audio image

  • Noun:
    basically shredded cabbage

Word Origin

coleslaw
coleslaw: [18] Cole is an ancient and now little used English word for plants of the cabbage family, such as cabbage or rape (it comes ultimately from Latin caulis ‘cabbage’, whose underlying meaning was ‘hollow stem’ – see CAULIFLOWER). It was used in the partial translation of Dutch koolsla when that word was borrowed into English in the late 18th century. Kool, Dutch for ‘cabbage’, became cole, but sla presented more of a problem (it represents a phonetically reduced form of salade ‘salad’), and it was rendered variously as -slaugh (now defunct) and -slaw. (Interestingly enough, the earliest record of the word we have, from America in the 1790s – it was presumably borrowed from Dutch settlers – is in the form cold slaw, indicating that even then in some quarters English cole was not a sufficiently familiar word to be used for Dutch kool. Coldslaw is still heard, nowadays as a folketymological alteration of coleslaw.)=> cauliflower, cole, salad
coleslaw (n.)
also cole-slaw, cole slaw, 1794, American English, partial translation of Dutch koolsla, from kool "cabbage" (see cole) + sla "salad" (see slaw). Commonly cold slaw in English until 1860s, when Middle English cole "cabbage" was revived.

Example

1. I would like to have coleslaw .
2. Smelling that coleslaw all day ?
3. I ordered coleslaw , but this is potato salad .
4. Urban pantry also sells biscotti , zucchini pickles , coleslaw and garlic-marinated sweet red peppers .
5. For a little variety , she swapped coleslaw for lettuce and tomato and called that one the hood burger .

more: >How to Use "coleslaw" with Example Sentences