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Origin and history of sirop

sirop(n.)

an old or French spelling of syrup (q.v.), used later in a specific sense of "sweetened fruit-juice concentrate" (1871).

Entries linking to sirop

late 14c., sirup, "thick, sweet liquid," from Old French sirop "sugared drink" (13c.), and perhaps from Italian siroppo, both from Arabic sharab "beverage, wine," literally "something drunk," from verb shariba "he drank" (compare sherbet). Spanish jarabe, jarope, Old Provençal eissarop are from Arabic; Italian sciroppo is via Medieval Latin sirupus. In English, formerly also sirup, sirop.

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    Trends of sirop

    adapted from books.google.com/ngrams/ with a 7-year moving average; ngrams are probably unreliable.

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