prato

Etymology
., from.

Noun

 * 1) dish, plate
 * 2) * 1435, A. López Carreira (ed.), Fragmentos de notarios, doc. E2-39:
 * "gl"

- Rematouse enno meestre a sartana e o prato de Davi por X


 * 1) * 1459, A. López Carreira (ed.), Fragmentos de notarios, doc. D40a:
 * "gl"

- Dous barriis, quatro pichees destano, dous pratos destano e hun de madeira … Hun conqeiro con viinte et quatro conqas et seys pratos de madeira, et tres malladeras et hun enbudo


 * 1) dish, preparation; recipe

Etymology
From.

Noun

 * 1) grass, lawn ground covered with grass kept closely mown
 * 2) meadow
 * 1) meadow

Etymology
From, from. Possibly arrived through the intermediate of, or perhaps a semi-learned term or one used by mainly upper-class speakers in the past, and thus avoiding the usual sound shifts from Latin -pl- into Portuguese -ch-. Compare 🇨🇬. Doublet of the popularly inherited and the Hellenism.

Noun

 * 1) plate
 * 2) a flat dish from which food is served or eaten
 * 3) a course at a meal
 * 4)  cymbal