confetti
English
Etymology
Borrowed (possibly via French) from Italian confetti (literally “confections”), used to describe sugar-coated almonds, and by extension things imitating them (like pellets of plaster), which were thrown in Italy during festivities like Carnival and weddings.[1][2] (This practice is mentioned in English since at least the 1810s.[3][4]) The French and the English adopted the practice of celebrating weddings and other festivities by throwing such candies, or (by the late 1800s) tiny pieces of colored paper symbolizing them,[5][6][7] partially displacing their earlier practice of throwing rice.[2]
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /kənˈfɛt.i/
Audio (Southern England) (file) - Rhymes: -ɛti
Noun
confetti (uncountable)
- Small pieces or strips (streamers) of colored paper or other material (metal, plaster, etc) generally thrown about at festive occasions, especially at weddings and in victory celebrations.
- (rare) Edible Italian sugar-coated almonds, especially those which are used as part of a traditional Italian wedding.
- 1870, Henry T. Tuckerman, in the Boston Transcript, quoted in The New York Observer Yearbook and Almanac, page 143:
- [...] a pale and fair devotee of fashion who has left off eating confetti, and recovered her bloom.
- 1959, Loren Wahl, Lorenzo Madalena, Confetti for Gino:
- "Why, if you and Teresa, our own best man and maid of honor . . . oh, how wonderful that would be, to eat confetti at your wedding!"
- 1975, Garibaldi Marto Lapolla, The grand Gennaro, Ayer Co. Pub.:
- Emilio and Roberto had pooled their resources in money and had arranged with the cafe keeper for steaming thick chocolate, a slow-pouring syrup-like drink, the richest boccotoni, cream-filled heavy sfogliate, and almond confetti.
- 1986, Anne Paolucci, Sepia tones: seven short stories, Council on Natl Literature, →ISBN:
- There were large trays with assorted pastries and colored almond confetti for a wedding, and he remembered with a pang that this very day was the wedding anniversary, the day Pino and Maria had married (so long ago!) in Rome.
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:confetti.
- 1870, Henry T. Tuckerman, in the Boston Transcript, quoted in The New York Observer Yearbook and Almanac, page 143:
Usage notes
- Very rarely, a single piece of confetti may be called a confetto, as in Italian.
Derived terms
Translations
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Verb
confetti (third-person singular simple present confettis, present participle confettiing, simple past and past participle confettied)
- (transitive) To scatter with confetti.
References
- Giacomo Carnevale, Notizie storiche dell'antico e moderno Tortonese, raccolte da Conte G. Carnevale (1845), page 24 (a period Italian account of confetti-throwing during a wedding): I congiunti, e gli amici fanno loro corteggio, nel ritorno alla casa dalla Chiesa sono salutati da lieti evviva dai ragazzi ai quali vengano gettati dallo sposo confetti, nocciuoli, od amandole; ...
- The Oxford Companion to Sugar and Sweets, page 779 and Tim Richardson, Sweets: a history of candy, page 129
- “confetti”, in Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: Merriam-Webster, 1996–present.
- “confetti”, in Dictionary.com Unabridged, Dictionary.com, LLC, 1995–present.
- Oxford Dictionary of Word Origins (→ISBN) and The Oxford Dictionary of Phrase and Fable (Elizabeth Knowles, 2006, →ISBN)
- Douglas Harper (2001–2024) “confetti”, in Online Etymology Dictionary.
- Christian Roy, Traditional Festivals: A Multicultural Encyclopedia, (2005, ABC-CLIO, →ISBN), page 53, says "In 1892, paper confetti were invented by an engineer from Modane in Savoy (ceded to France along with Nice in 1860), recycling paper used in raising silkworms, and replaced the heavy plaster confetti, the use of which was now limited to certain days and events." And Uit Parijs, Confetti, in the Dutch newspaperpaper Algemeen Handelsblad, 6 March 1892, records their use in Paris that year. Other references suggest paper confetti may have been devised as early as the 1870s.
French
Etymology
Borrowed from Italian confetti (plural), reinterpreted as a singular (compare spaghetti). Doublet of confit. See English confetti for more. The shift of the sense from little projectiles made of plaster to coloured pieces of paper originated in the late 19th century in Paris with their use during public festivities.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /kɔ̃.fe.ti/
Further reading
- “confetti”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
Italian
Verb
confetti
- inflection of confettare:
- second-person singular present indicative
- first/second/third-person singular present subjunctive
- third-person singular imperative
Anagrams
Portuguese
Romanian
Declension
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