Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - The difference between cookies and cookies

The difference between cookies and cookies

1. Different pronunciations:

Cookies: English [? b? sk? T], beauty [? b? sk? t].

Cookie: English [? k? Ki], beauty [? k? ki].?

2. Different scope: Cookies are cookies, and cookies generally refer to all kinds of cookies.

Cookies cover a wider range than cookies, including, for example, Si Kang, baked cupcakes and some hard and crisp cookies. Taste also covers sweet, salty, spicy and other flavors. Cookies generally refer to sweet soft cookies in the United States and Canada, and the recipes generally include raisins, oats and chocolate chips.

3. Different sources:

Cookies come from Latin, which means "cooked twice". At first, it refers to snacks baked twice, first baked and then dried. English was introduced in the14th century, which means hard and crisp snacks baked on both sides. Cookie comes from the Dutch word "koekje", which first appeared in American writing in17th century, meaning cupcakes.

Extended data:

The use of 1. cookie has also caused a series of thorny problems. In Britain, biscuits are soft, sticky and wet biscuits.

2. Compared with biscuits, biscuits are larger in size and richer in materials. In the United States, biscuits include biscuits and cookies in the British population.

In Scotland, it is more likely to refer to simple steamed buns. In fact, the word cookie comes from Dutch koekje, which means "cupcakes". With the arrival of the early Dutch colonial era, this word may have been widely used in the United States at that time, but we have no conclusive evidence to prove it.