It's been 30 years and I still can't get over the fact that the French word for "potatoes" is "ground apples." Have The French never had an apple?
It's been 30 years and I still can't get over the fact that the French word for "potatoes" is "ground apples." Have The French never had an apple?
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Some German speakers say "Erdapfel" which is literally "earth apple."
53 0 ReplyIn Dutch, a potato is called aardappel, which literally translates to "earth apple" (aarde meaning "earth" and appel meaning "apple").
30 0 ReplyUnsurprisingly, similar for us in Afrikaans.
"Aartappel"
13 0 Reply
The Swabian word Grombira comes from literally "ground pear"
6 0 Reply"Grumbern" is the same in parts of Frankonia.
2 0 Reply
Isnt that most common in Austria
6 2 ReplyThat's my understanding. Though I have only visited the Kartoffel regions myself.
2 0 ReplyI know the Germans near the Czech border are also calling it erdapfel sometimes but in southern Bavaria and Austria it's the norm from my experience.
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I'm in Bavaria, and my grandparents used to say Erdapfel, though for any generations after that I've only ever heard them say Kartoffel.
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It's probably the Germans living near French, who've had bad influences.
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