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TAKE THE QUIZTrending: āgazpachoā
Lookups spiked 1,800% on February 9-10, 2022
Gazpacho trended much higher than the word usually does (especially considering that it is far from summer), when a member of Congress appeared to confuse this word (which is a type of soup) with gestapo, a word for a secret police organization.
The extremist Republican congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene triggered a wave of viral jokes on Wednesday after ranting about the āgazpacho policeā patrolling the Capitol building in Washington DC.
ā The Guardian (online, London, Eng.), 9 Feb. 2022
Gazpacho is āa spicy soup that is usually made from chopped raw vegetables (such as tomato, onion, pepper, and cucumber) and that is served cold.ā We define gestapo as āa secret-police organization employing underhanded and terrorist methods against persons suspected of disloyalty.ā
Gazpacho comes to English directly from Spanish, in which is also refers to a soup. Gestapo comes from German, taken fromĀ GeheimeĀ Staatspolizei (literally, āsecret state policeā).
Gazpacho has been used in English since the latter portion of the 18th century. The word appears in a translation of Don Quixote (by Charles Jarvis), published in 1766. The line āI had rather have my belly full of my own poor porridgeā contains a footnote, after the word porridge, which reads * āāGazpacho:ā it is made of oil, vinegar, water, salt, and spice, with bread.ā The following decade saw the word appear in a translation of The history of the famous preacher Friar Gerund de Campazas, in which the soup is once again explained in a footnote.
ā¦dividing amongst them some turron, comfits, filberds, and pine-buts, which he had brought for that purpose, and entertaining himself with them all, whilst a leg of mutton was roasting, a large pancake with rashers of bacon was frying, and some stewed beef was getting ready, which with come caveeched sardinas, and a slice of cheese for dessert, beginning with a gazpacho* with hard eggs, compose in all a substantial and solid supper.
*A _gazpacho_ is a kind of poor soup made with bits of bread, oil, vinegar, garlick, and other ingredients; but a gazpacho with hard eggs is better than ordinary.
ā JosĆ© Francisco de Isla, _The history of the famous preacher Friar Gerund de Campazas_, 1772
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