tempura

Etymology
Borrowed from, from , ultimately from. Different dictionaries link two different original terms:
 * or, third-person present singular or imperative tense of , from 🇨🇬.
 * , from, plural of . When Portuguese explorers (mostly Jesuit missionaries) arrived in Japan, they abstained from eating beef, pork, and poultry during the , a Catholic series of holidays. Instead, they ate fried vegetables and fish. This was the first contact of the Japanese with fried food, and since then they began associating the Portuguese word têmpora (which they pronounced tenpura) with such food.

Noun

 * 1) A Japanese dish made by deep-frying vegetables, seafood, or other foods in a light batter.

Translations

 * Arabic: تِيمْبُورَا
 * Belarusian: тэ́мпура
 * Bulgarian: те́мпура
 * Chinese:
 * Cantonese: 天婦羅, 天麩羅
 * Hakka:
 * Hokkien:
 * Mandarin:, , ,
 * Esperanto: tempuro
 * Finnish: tempura
 * French:
 * German: Tempura
 * Greek: τεμπούρα
 * Hebrew:
 * Italian: tempura
 * Japanese:, ,
 * Korean: ,
 * Malay: tempura
 * Marathi: तेम्पुरा
 * Nepali: तरुवा
 * Persian: تمپورا
 * Polish:
 * Portuguese: tempurá, tempura
 * Russian: ,
 * Spanish: tempura
 * Thai: เท็มปุระ
 * Ukrainian: те́мпура
 * Vietnamese:, thiên phu la, thiên phụ la

Etymology
Possibly from, from , from , from.

Noun

 * 1)  kikiam

Etymology
From.

Noun

 * 1) tempura

Etymology
Borrowed from, from , ultimately from. Different dictionaries link two different original terms:
 * or, third-person present singular or imperative tense of , from 🇨🇬.
 * , from, plural of . When Portuguese explorers (mostly Jesuit missionaries) arrived in Japan, they abstained from eating beef, pork, and poultry during the , a Catholic series of holidays. Instead, they ate fried vegetables and fish. This was the first contact of the Japanese with fried food, and since then they began associating the Portuguese word têmpora (which they pronounced tenpura) with such food.

Noun

 * 1)  A Japanese dish made by deep-frying vegetables, seafood, or other foods in a light batter.

Etymology
, from, ultimately from , cognate with either or ,. See above for more.

Etymology
, from, from.

Etymology
, from, ultimately from. See above for more.

Adjective

 * 1)  breaded or battered like

Etymology
Borrowed from traditional Hepburn romaji of, from , from.