{"id":2435,"date":"2016-04-05T18:45:01","date_gmt":"2016-04-05T18:45:01","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.amazighworldnews.com\/?p=2435"},"modified":"2023-03-02T10:35:59","modified_gmt":"2023-03-02T15:35:59","slug":"ethnic-food-tabadirt-abadir","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/amazighworldnews.com\/ethnic-food-tabadirt-abadir\/","title":{"rendered":"An Ethnic Food: Tabadirt or Abadir"},"content":{"rendered":"
Amazigh linguistics is very important here to make a clear-cut distinction between feminine and masculine nouns. If a noun is masculine, Abadir, for instance to feminize it, the consonant \u201cT\u201d is usually added at the beginning as a prefix (derivational morpheme) and at the end of the word, Tabadirt. To give illustrations, Ighram (singular) becomes Tighrmt (singular), and Amazir becomes Tamazirt (village\/countryside), and Amazigh becomes Tamazight. Arba (Tamazight), Afrokh (tashlhiyt), and Ahn(d)jir (tarifiyt) that stands for a boy becomes Tarbat, Tafrokht, and Tahnjirt (a girl). When one hears or reads \u201cAIT \u201cin tandem with group of people, it simply signifies people of ATTA are as we say Ait Atta, Ait Mellol\/ people of Mellol. In light of this clarification Amazigh language is patently in no way a sexist language.<\/p>\n
Contextualization of Tabadirt<\/strong><\/span> Introduction<\/strong><\/span>
\nAs students at the level of university, we were conversing on some way to rejuvenate our potency for study on the eve of beginning a coming semester. We have a common background of culture and language, Amazigh (particularly South East). We usually try to feel at ease as soon as possible. A seeminly common suggestion was to prepare Tabadirt. My roommates finally agreed to do so on condition that it should be prepared in Taghazot beach, Agadir.
\nAs far as a reference of findings obtained here is concerned, my close cultural and linguistic familiarities with the local culture and interviewing persons of the area allowed me to write down this sort of sine qua non information pertaining to day-to-day life of people in question.<\/p>\n
\nLuciano Pavarotti states \u201cOne of the very nicest things about life is the way we must regularly stop whatever it is we are doing and devote our attention to eating.\u201d From this quote, one\u2019s mind is set on tenterhooks if one does not eat. That is, one always keeps seeking to set it at rest at all costs, instead. Whenever one yearns for the tranquility, one naturally commences to consider how to enjoy it to the fullest. In so doing people\u2019s intuition takes them and tries to ponder on the techniques ancestors used to instigate their lives to get pleasure whether by what they used to eat or how to prepare it. Indeed, Tabadirt epitomizes much more than a meal per se outside of one\u2019s home. In this essay, I will broach the recipe of its preparation, define it in its context and evince its significance as an ethnic food throughout history in direct connection with culture.<\/p>\n