Noun We had chicken curry for dinner. The recipe calls for a tablespoon of curry.
Word History
Etymology
Verb (1)
Middle English curreyen, correyen, cunrayen "to clean and comb (a horse), treat (tanned leather)," borrowed from Anglo-French conreier, cunreier, curreier (continental Old French conreer) "to prepare, dress, equip, tidy up, clean and rub down (an animal), cure (herring)," going back to Vulgar Latin *conrēdāre, probably borrowed from Gothic garedan "to make provision for" (with con-con- replacing ga-), from ga-, perfective and collective prefix + -redan, going back to Germanic *rēđan- "to make provision for, decide" — more at read entry 1
Note: As with the related verb arraier, aroier (see array entry 1), the Anglo-French forms conreier, etc., show generalization of the tonic stem of the Old French verb. English has further modified the French word by shifting stress onto the initial syllable. In contrast with array entry 1, the more general meaning of conreier ("provide, equip") never entered English. — The presumption is that *conrēdāre was an early adaptation into spoken Latin of a word used by Goths recruited into or fighting alongside of the Roman army. The etymon is generally attested in Romance languages outside of Romanian: Old Occitan conrezar "to equip," conrear "to provide what is needed," Catalan & Spanish conrear "to cultivate (land)" (the Spanish word perhaps borrowed from Catalan), Italian corredare "to equip, furnish" (with an apparent reflex of open rather than close e).
Noun
Tamil kaṟi (or a cognate word in another Dravidian language)