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cabouco or cavouco, 'a quarry.' It is not in Singh. This is the Ceylon term for the substance called in India Laterite (q.v.), and in Madras by the native name Moorum (q.v.). 229.ġ673.-" Cabob is Rostmeat on Skewers, cut in little round pieces no bigger than a Sixpence, and Ginger and Garlick put between each."- Fryer, 404.ġ689.-" Cabob, that is Beef or Mutton cut in small pieces, sprinkled with salt and pepper, and dipt with Oil and Garlick, which have been mixt together in a dish, and then roasted on a Spit, with sweet Herbs put between and stuff in them, and basted with Oil and Garlick all the while."- Ovington, 397.ġ814.-"I often partook with my Arabs of a dish common in Arabia called Kabob or Kab-ab, which is meat cut into small pieces and placed on thin skewers, alternately between slices of onion and green ginger, seasoned with pepper, salt, and Kian, fried in ghee, to be ate with rice and dholl."- Forbes, Or. ipsam (carnem) in parva frustra dissectam, et veruculis ferreis acuum modo infixam, super crates ferreas igne supposito positam torrefaciunt, quam succo limonum aspersam avidè esitant."- Prosper Alpinus, Pt. But specifically it is applied to the dish described in the quotations from Fryer and Ovington.Ĭ. This word is used in Anglo-Indian households generically for roast meat. This robe falls to the middle of the leg, and is fastened down the front with circular brooches."- McNair, Perak, &c., 151.ĬABOB, s. ġ878.-"Over all this is worn (by Malay women) a long loose dressing-gown style of garment called the kabaya. This distinction is still true.ġ860.-"I afterwards understood that the dress they were wearing was a sort of native garment, which there in the country they call sarong or kabaai, but I found it very unbecoming."- Max Havelaar, 43. du Japon, 56.ġ689.-"It is a distinction between the Moors and Bannians, the Moors tie their Caba's always on the Right side, and the Bannians on the left."- Ovington, 314.
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ġ645.-"Vne Cabaye qui est vne sorte de vestement comme vne large soutane ouverte par le devant, à manches fort larges."- Cardim, Rel. libās, 'clothing') ou Cabaye, est de toile de Cotton fort fine et blanche, qui leur va jusqu'aux talons."- Pyrard de Laval, i. 1610.-"Cette jaquette ou soutane, qu'ils appellent Libasse (P. 386.ġ598.-"They wear sometimes when they go abroad a thinne cotton linnen gowne called Cabaia."- Linschoten, 70. In these two passages Burton translates caftan.ġ585.-"The King is apparelled with a Cabie made like a shirt tied with strings on one side."- R. But it has become familiar in Dutch, from its use in Java. The word is not now used in India Proper, unless by the Portuguese. Whether from Arabic or from Portuguese, the word has been introduced into the Malay countries, and is in common use in Java for the light cotton surcoat worn by Europeans, both ladies and gentlemen, in dishabille. From Dozy's remarks this would seem in Barbary to take the form ḳabāya. The word seems to be one of those which the Portuguese had received in older times from the Arabic ( ḳabā, 'a vesture'). This word, though of Asiatic origin, was perhaps introduced into India by the Portuguese, whose writers of the 16th century apply it to the surcoat or long tunic of muslin, which is one of the most common native garments of the better classes in India.