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    • Biscuit

      • In British English, a cookie is called a biscuit. It is a baked or cooked snack or dessert that is typically small, flat, and sweet. So, next time you’re in England, don’t be surprised when you’re offered a biscuit instead of a cookie.
      www.ncesc.com/geographic-pedia/what-do-brits-call-a-biscuit/
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  2. May 5, 2019 · The British call cookies "biscuits". They occasionally use the word "cookie" in the context of using Americanisms like "he got caught with his hand in the cookie jar", or "that's the way the cookie crumbles".

    • Why Do The British Say Biscuit Instead of Cookie?
    • Biscuits, Cookies, and Crackers
    • Hard Tack Or “Ship’S Bread”
    • The Southern Soft Biscuit
    • The Word Cake

    This history lesson also helps explain another mystery. People often wonder why the English called a cookie a biscuit (or a sweet biscuit) and why we, in America call the same sort of thing a cookie. Now you know. New York became such an important city that the word cookie, which we got from the Dutch, became the standard word for all such baked go...

    The English word biscuit came from the Old French bescuit, which literally meant “twice cooked.” The bis part meant “twice” and the –cuit part was derived from the Latin coctus, meaning “cooked.” Coctus was the past participle of the verb couqere meaning “to cook.” The Italian word biscottiis also related. Biscuit, originally, would have referred t...

    One of the first, if not the first, cracker manufacturing businesses in the United States was the firm of Theodore Pearson in Newburyport, Massachusetts, beginning in 1792. Pearson’s crackers were large, round, crisp and not exactly refined crackers which were known as “pilot” or as “ship” bread, as well as “hard tack.” These were popular with merc...

    No discussion of the word biscuit can fail to mention the Southern biscuit, which adds to the confusion, being a soft leavened bread instead of a hard cracker, highly perishable, and completely misnamed, at least by etiological standards, being definitely not twice-baked. Today’s Southern biscuit probably originated with the Beaten biscuit, which i...

    The word koek, and thus cookie, is closely related to the work cake which came from the Old Norse word kaka, in the thirteenth century. Although today we think of a cake as something made with very specific types of ingredients and techniques, the word originally had nothing to do with any specific recipe but referred to the shape: something round ...

  3. Oct 14, 2024 · The usage of the word cookie varies markedly in different parts of the English-speaking world. The usual British perception is that it is the American equivalent of biscuit, but it is not quite so simple as that.

  4. Sep 27, 2023 · The word “cookie” originated from the Dutch word “koekje,” which means small cake or biscuit. The term was first used in English during the early 18th century and referred to a plain, round, sweet confection.

  5. Jun 15, 2021 · The word cookie comes from koekje, which is Dutch for “little cake.” Biscuit comes from the Latin words bis and coquere, or “twice baked.” The biscuits enjoyed in the UK tend to be simpler ...

    • Michele Debczak
  6. Nov 21, 2012 · Broadly, I’d say in the UK we use the word “biscuit” in the sense that the word cookie” is used in the US. For us Brits it means, generally, a small, flat (ish), sweet baked good that’s hard and rigid.

  7. Mar 19, 2021 · It’s not really accurate to say that “biscuit” is the British word for “cookie” or vice versa, as there are multiple different ancestries at play here.

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