Below is an email inquiry I submitted to Wayword Radio, a Podcast about words that Katja turned me onto.
Hey Wayword,
I came across a definition that, as far as I can tell, needs a word. I have recently delved into baking more, and I feel my breads & cakes need more semantic distinction than just lumping them in to the rest of my culinary pursuits. So I began a wordhunt.
However, my scouring of the dictionary and thesaurus for something of or having to do with baking have yielded no lingual arc. Could this be?
1. Patisserie has perhaps a correct root, being related to pasta or dough, but conceptually/colloquially refers a pastry shop. That’s too niche. Plus, the suffix if changed to -ary, would be too aurally confusing for my taste.
2. Culinary’s root implies the kitchen, which could work, but already has an associated definition that makes it feels too inclusive.
So I went to a Latin dictionary for a new root word, and this is where I’d love your input. My Latin is in no shape to judge, so I wonder, which of these two roots do you think would be better for my vocabulary expansion.
clibanus: an oven or furnace/tray for baking bread.
fornacalis : relating to an oven
fornacula : a small oven
fornax : fornacis : oven, furnace, kilnI like that cliban- refers to baking bread
I prefer the look and sound of forna- but don’t like the inclination to anglosize the spelling, also it could be assumed to mean that it has to do with fornication.clibanary, fornacary, furnacary: of or having to do with ovens baking.
“Definition, seeking a Single, Latin, Root—for long hours of kneading, and the fire to really heat things up.
Asa Nathannael Hunt
Tags: baking, definitions, food, words