mirin

See also: 'mirin

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Japanese 味醂 (mirin).

Noun

mirin (usually uncountable, plural mirins)

  1. A form of Japanese rice wine, less alcoholic than sake and used in cooking.
    • 1989 November, Drew DeSilver; Jan Gahala, “What is that stuff?”, in Vegetarian Times, ISSN 0164-8497, page 43:
      Although naturally brewed mirin is made from only water, sweet brown rice, and rice koji, much of the mirin sold in natural food stores and Oriental markets is sweetened with sugar or corn syrup; read labels carefully.

Translations


Catalan

Verb

mirin

  1. third-person plural present subjunctive form of mirar
  2. third-person plural imperative form of mirar

Indonesian

Etymology

From Japanese 味醂 (みりん, mirin), from (, mi, flavour (UK); flavor (US)) + (りん, rin, remove astringency; bleach in water).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [ˈmirɪn]
  • Hyphenation: mi‧rin

Noun

mirin (plural mirin-mirin, first-person possessive mirinku, second-person possessive mirinmu, third-person possessive mirinnya)

  1. (cooking) mirin, a type of Japanese sake used for cooking

Further reading


Northern Kurdish

mirin

Etymology

From Proto-Iranian *márti, from Proto-Indo-Iranian *márti, from Proto-Indo-European *mer-.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /mɪˈɾɪn/

Noun

Central Kurdish مردن (mirdin)

mirin f

  1. death
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