• @expatriado
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    2518 days ago

    there is a capitalized AND to imply this is a 2 for 1 til deal

    • @Dasus
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      18 days ago

      Yeah, it was the sap of marsh mallow that the Egyptians used.

      Saying that doesn’t mean that they think Egyptians used the English word “marshmallow”.

      Edit but it likely was something like their words for those things, which then got translated again and again and again.

      The original connotation didn’t reach us. My native language calls the modern sweet “foam candy” (vaahtokarkki)

      • Carighan Maconar
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        818 days ago

        My country calls it “mice bacon” (Mäusespeck). 😅

        • Flying Squid
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          117 days ago

          That doesn’t make sense in any way.

          • Carighan Maconar
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            17 days ago

            Apparently it’s based on the fact that the colour reminded people of the bacon used in mouse traps. Although it’s a bit unclear, it could also play into things that the first company to sell marshmallows en masse in Germany used mice-shaped ones.

      • @kofe
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        518 days ago

        Ooo what do you call cotton candy?

        • @Dasus
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          818 days ago

          Hattara.

          It doesn’t directly translate into anything. Sort of connotates the flimsiness of the product, but much else.

          Hattara sounds like it could be an iron age god tbh.

          Oh, oh. I wasn’t too wrong. Hattara is a Finnish mythical being. https://fi.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hattara_(mytologia)

          In French, the word “hattara” means father’s beard, and in Greek, the word “hattara” means old women’s hair.

          I love etymology but Finnish ones aren’t as easy to figure out as English / other PIE languages

          • @kofe
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            318 days ago

            Thank you for the reply! I’ve never been big on etymology but I might need to get more into it, that’s so neat.