English
Etymology
From Turkish sucuk. Doublet of soutzouki.
Noun
sujuk (countable and uncountable, plural sujuks)
- A dry, spicy sausage of Ottoman Turkish origin that is popular in the Middle East, Central Asia and Southeastern Europe and, to a lesser extent, in other regions that used to be part of the Ottoman Empire. It consists of ground meat (usually beef) mixed with spices including cumin, sumac, garlic, salt, and red pepper, fed into a sausage casing and allowed to dry for several weeks.
- A sausage-shaped confection, made from walnuts sewn onto a string, and dipped in thickened grape must and dried.
- Synonyms: churchkhela, soutzoukos
Translations
type of sausage
- Arabic: سُجُق m (sujuq)
- Armenian: (Eastern Armenian) սուջուխ (hy) (suǰux), (Western Armenian) երշիկ (hy) (eršik)
- Azerbaijani: sucuq
- Bulgarian: суджу́к m (sudžúk)
- Crimean Tatar: sucuq
- French: soudjouk m
- Gagauz: sucuk
- Greek: σουτζούκι (el) f (soutzoúki)
- Karaim: sudžuch
- Kazakh: шұжық (şūjyq)
- Khakas: чочых (çoçıx)
- Krymchak: sucuk
- Kyrgyz: чучук (ky) (cucuk)
- Ottoman Turkish: صوجوق (sucuk)
- Persian: زیچک sg (zīčak), زیجک sg (zījak)
- Polish: sucuk (pl) m or n
- Romanian: sugiuc (ro) n
- Russian: суджу́к (ru) m (sudžúk)
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: суџука f
- Roman: sudžuka f
- Southern Altai: чучук (čučuk)
- Tatar: соҗык (socıq)
- Turkish: sucuk (tr)
- Urum: sucux
- Uyghur: چۇجۇق (chujuq)
|
confection
- Abkhaz: аџьанџьы́хәа (adžandžə́xʷa)
- Armenian: սուջուխ (hy) (suǰux)
- Bulgarian: балсуджук m (balsudžuk), мъстеница f (mǎstenica)
- Georgian: ჩურჩხელა (ka) (čurčxela), ჯანჯუხა (ǯanǯuxa)
- Greek: σουτζούκι (el) f (soutzoúki)
- Mingrelian: ჯანჯუხა (ǯanǯuxa)
- Ottoman Turkish: صوجوق (sucuk)
- Romanian: sugiuc (ro) n
- Russian: суджу́к (ru) m (sudžúk), чурчхе́ла (ru) f (čurčxéla)
- Turkish: sucuk (tr), cevizli sucuk
|