[ɡʲo̟ˈvɛt͡ʃ]
OriginBorrowed from Ottoman Turkish كوكج (güveç). Cognates include Greek γιουβέτσι (giouvétsi), Macedonian ѓувеч (ǵuveč), Romanian ghiveci and Serbo-Croatian ђувеч/đuveč.
- earthenware stewpan
- stew made in this pot; hodge-podge; gyuvech (with meat, rice, vegetables, etc.)
“Зеле́ният боб че́сто присъ́ства в ле́тния гюве́ч.” — Green beans are often included in summer gyuvech.
Formsгюве́ч(canonical, masculine) · gjuvéč(romanization) · гюве́че(diminutive) · гюве́ч(indefinite, singular) · гюве́чи(indefinite, plural) · гюве́чът(definite, singular, subjective) · гюве́чите(definite, plural, subjective) · гюве́ча(definite, objective, singular) · гюве́чите(definite, objective, plural) · -(count-form, singular) · гюве́ча(count-form, plural)