Snatched
As offal refers to various parts of animals. Other names are Gericke , Ghraib , hanger , Gehenk , Gelünge , succeed , Gwaid and Touchpad
In the 15th century the term can be found in the regional vocabulary. It was used to describe the lungs , heart and throat of animals for slaughter . It evidently forms a collective to Schlung , a subsidiary form of Schlund . In the German language, according to Duden, it means lungs, heart and liver in slaughtered animals.
In the meat industry in Austria , the meat belongs to the innards and includes these except for the brain if the organs are not separated. In domestic pigs , in addition to the tongue , this also includes the stomach , spleen , kidney and pig net. The sweetbread for the calf . The tongue, heart, kidney and liver are considered part of the lamb's meat .
The term for the intestine can be a misrepresentation or expansion of the original meaning for "intestines without stomach and intestines".
As specimen material after slaughter and slaughter by-product is veterinary medicine as well counted for offal: tongue, larynx , esophagus , trachea , bronchi , lungs and pleura , lymph nodes , heart and pericardium .
In the hunter's language the stomach and intestines of game are referred to as snares or sheaths . It is also used as a counterpart to the "small Gescheide" for the intestines with urinary and genital organs .
See also
Individual evidence
- ↑ Definition succeed in fleischwirtschaft.de
- ↑ Kluge. Etymological dictionary of the German language. Edited by Elmar Seebold. 24th, revised and expanded edition. De Gruyter, Berlin / New York 2002. ISBN 978-3-11-017473-1
- ↑ Entry at duden.de
- ↑ Sliced pork at fleisch-teilteile.at
- ↑ Veal slings at fleisch-teilteile.at
- ↑ Sliced lamb at fleisch-teilteile.at
- ↑ "Language skills - language contact and multilingualism - loss of language" by Alfred Wildfeuer
- ↑ Example of a report on a meat inspection
- ↑ Entry at brockhaus.de
- ↑ Entry in the Hunting Language Manual