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chef

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

See also: Chef, chèf, and chef-

English

Etymology

Unadapted borrowing from French chef (from the positions of chef d’office and chef de cuisine),[1] from Old French chief (head, leader) (English chief), from Vulgar Latin capus (head) (from which also captain, chieftain), from Latin caput (head) (possibly related to English cap (head covering)), from Proto-Indo-European *kauput-. Doublet of cape, capo, caput, and chief through Latin, and head and Howth through Proto-Indo-European.

Pronunciation

English Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia
  • IPA(key): /ʃɛf/, (spelling pronunciation) /t͡ʃɛf/
  • Audio (General Australian):(file)
  • Rhymes: -ɛf

Noun

chef (plural chefs)

  1. The presiding cook in the kitchen of a large household.
    • a. 1845, R. H. Barham, Blasphemer's Warning in Ingoldsby Legends (1847), 3rd Ser., 245
      The Chef's peace of mind was restor'd, And in due time a banquet was placed on the board.
  2. The head cook of a restaurant or other establishment.
  3. Any cook.
    My partner is the chef of the household, while I do most of the cleaning.
  4. (slang) One who manufactures illegal drugs; a cook.
    • 1998, SPIN, volume 14, number 3, page 100:
      But trying to stop all the nation's meth chefs makes as much sense as building a wall along the Mexican border.
    • 2013, Mike Power, Drugs 2.0:
      Owsley Stanley, the world's most exacting and prolific LSD chef who supplied the majority of America's West Coast with LSD in the 1960s, claimed he made so much acid not because he wanted to change the world, but rather because it was almost impossible not to make vast quantities of the drug once the synthesis had been embarked upon.
  5. (historical) A reliquary in the shape of a head.

Usage notes

When used in reference to a cook with no sous-chefs or other workers beneath him, the term connotes a certain degree of prestigewhether culinary education or abilitydistinguishing the chef from a “cook”. As a borrowing, chef was originally italicized, but such treatment is now obsolete. Within a catering establishment, the head cook (and no-one else) will normally be addressed simply as "chef" as a term of respect.

Synonyms

Hypernyms

Derived terms

Descendants

  • Afrikaans: sjef
  • Malay: cef
  • Maltese: xeff
  • Thai: เชฟ (chéep)

Translations

Verb

chef (third-person singular simple present chefs, present participle cheffing or (uncommon) chefing, simple past and past participle cheffed or (uncommon) chefed)

  1. (stative, informal) To work as a chef; to prepare and cook food professionally.
    • 1953, The Deke Quarterly, volume 71, number 4, page 32:
      It was Brick who talked on alumni relations with the active chapters and who cheffed at our steak fry (more of that later) and Mrs. Cowles who took over  []
    • 1996, Sonora Review, number 31, page 110:
      I cheffed part-time at a nice restaurant in town.
    • 2007, Indianapolis Monthly, page 68:
      He opened Oakleys in 2002, having formerly cheffed at the late, much-missed Something Different and, before that, world-renowned kitchens in Chicago []
    • 2020, William Sitwell, The Restaurant: A History of Eating Out, Simon and Schuster, →ISBN:
      A man called Richard Briggs cheffed at the Globe Tavern on Fleet Street, the White Hart Tavern in Holborn and the Temple Coffee House.
  2. (MLE, transitive) To stab with a knife, to shank.
    Synonyms: ching, splash; see also Thesaurus:stab
    He got cheffed up proper.
    • 2016, “Skeng Man”, ASAP of 67 (lyrics):
      Still on my knife work chef him up with that rambo
    • 2017 June 13, @louistheroux, Twitter, archived from the original on 8 November 2023:
      Child just said he'd "chef me up". I said not hungry, but it restored my faith in young generation, offering to cook for strangers.
    • 2018 August 9, “Pallance 2.0”, Taze of SMG (lyrics):
      He got cheffed in the A in the head
    • 2018 August 16, “Ks On Who”, Sav12 of 12World (lyrics):
      Third time he was out of luck
      He tripped up and got cheffed
    • 2019 October 9, Manuel Petrovic, quotee, “Jodie Chesney: Killer targeted 'wrong people' court told”, in BBC News, archived from the original on 2019-11-06:
      Asked how he knew that, he replied: "Uh? Because I know that ... It was to do with Svenson's op - they cheffed him up a couple of month or something, a couple of months before.
  3. (Internet slang) To impress others.
    • 2020, “Drip Like Me”, performed by Kenndog:
      thinkin' that I be cheffin'.'

Descendants

References

  1. chef”, in OED Online Paid subscription required, Oxford: Oxford University Press, launched 2000.

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