koeksister, noun
- Forms:
- Show more Also koek sister, koeksuster, koesijster, koesister, koesyster.
- Origin:
- Afrikaans, Dutch, MalayShow more Afrikaans koeksister, koesister, etymology obscure: perhaps from Dutch koek cake, or from Malay kuih cake, sweetmeat, seen in the form koesister) + sister, perhaps from sissen sizzle + agential suffix -er.
1. A twisted or plaited doughnut, deep-fried and immediately dipped into cold syrup. Also attributive. See also kossiter.
1994 Sunday Times 23 Jan. 28 (advt)For the sweetest treat you’re ever likely to eat, there’s nothing like a koeksister. A traditional Cape confection thought to be of Malay origin, this deep-fried twisted doughnut dipped and basted with lashings of syrup..is mos seriously addictive.
2. figurative. Often used allusively, suggesting the traditions and values of the Afrikaner people. Also attributive.
- Note:
- Quotation 1990 is a pun on English ‘sister’.
A twisted or plaited doughnut, deep-fried and immediately dipped into cold syrup. Also attributive.
Often used allusively, suggesting the traditions and values of the Afrikaner people. Also attributive.
- Derivatives:
- Hence (nonce) koeksisterish adjective, koeksisterism noun.1990 H.P. Toffoli in Style Nov. 50They call themselves the Cook Sisters but there’s nothing remotely koeksisterish about them. Stylish Sloane Rangers rather.1993 J. Pearce in Weekly Mail & Guardian 22 Oct. 45I found myself trying to get profound concerning the implications of the former high dominee of hippie-punk-twisted-koeksusterism ending up doing an after-dinner slot in a venue which..might even attract the odd Stellenbosch academic.