The word candy written in candy

The word candy found its way into English as early as the 15th century. However, centuries passed before it came to be used as a standalone noun, as it did during the 17th century.

At first, it was used in a compound word, as sugar candy, a usage you will still hear occasionally.

The term sugar candy came by way of French and Italian from the arabic sukkar quandi, meaning “candied sugar.”

Sukkar came from the Sanskrit word sarkara, which originally referred to granular particles, grit, or gravel, but came to also mean crystalline or “granular” sugar.

This usage shows, according to the ancient sources available, that granular sugar was being manufactured from sugar cane perhaps earlier than 500 B.C., but at least as early as 324 to 300 B.C. Before this, sugar cane would have been used for its juice.

Quandi (or qandi) came from the Sanskrit word kanda, meaning piece or fragment, through Persian to Arabic as Sukkar quandi to mean “sugar piece” or “candied sugar.”

This term became the Old French sucre candi, which passed into Middle English as sugar candy, to refer to a hard crystallized sugar.

Not until the 17th century did candy come to be used alone, as explained above.

See Candy Making Sugar Stages.

Lumps of rock sugar candy

This rock sugar candy is more like what the term “sugar candy” originally meant

Sugar candy, during Medieval times, was a hard candy consisting of lumps of crystallized sugar, sometimes known as rock candy, a name that still exists, although it is not heard very often.

Dryden & Palmer rock sugar candy

Dryden & Palmer is one of the few remaining sources of rock sugar candy.

Candy is used to refer to sweet treats much more liberally in the U.S. than in Britain, where it is more restricted to actual sugar candy, rather than sweets made with other ingredients such as chocolate, fruit, nuts, etc.

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Candy

Candy in Damascus.jpg

Candy at a bazaar in Damascus, Syria

Alternative names Sweets, lollies
Type Sugar confectionery
Main ingredients Sugar or honey
  •   Media: Candy

Candy, also called sweets (British English) or lollies (Australian English, New Zealand English),[a] is a confection that features sugar as a principal ingredient. The category, called sugar confectionery, encompasses any sweet confection, including chocolate, chewing gum, and sugar candy. Vegetables, fruit, or nuts which have been glazed and coated with sugar are said to be candied.

Physically, candy is characterized by the use of a significant amount of sugar or sugar substitutes. Unlike a cake or loaf of bread that would be shared among many people, candies are usually made in smaller pieces. However, the definition of candy also depends upon how people treat the food. Unlike sweet pastries served for a dessert course at the end of a meal, candies are normally eaten casually, often with the fingers, as a snack between meals. Each culture has its own ideas of what constitutes candy rather than dessert. The same food may be a candy in one culture and a dessert in another.[2]

History

A Japanese vendor selling sweets in «The Great Buddha Sweet Shop» from the Miyako meisho zue (1787)

The word candy entered the English language from the Old French çucre candi («sugar candy»). The French term probably has earlier roots in the Arabic qandi, Persian qand and Sanskrit khanda, all words for sugar.[3]

Sugarcane is indigenous to tropical South and Southeast Asia. Pieces of sugar were produced by boiling sugarcane juice in ancient India and consumed as khanda.[4][5][6][7][8] Between the 6th and 4th centuries BCE, the Persians, followed by the Greeks, discovered the people in India and their «reeds that produce honey without bees». They adopted and then spread sugar and sugarcane agriculture.[9]

Before sugar was readily available, candy was based on honey.[10] Honey was used in Ancient China, the Middle East, Egypt, Greece and the Roman Empire to coat fruits and flowers to preserve them or to create forms of candy.[11] Candy is still served in this form today, though now it is more typically seen as a type of garnish.

Before the Industrial Revolution, candy was often considered a form of medicine, either used to calm the digestive system or cool a sore throat. In the Middle Ages candy appeared on the tables of only the most wealthy at first. At that time, it began as a combination of spices and sugar used as an aid to digestion. Banquet hosts typically served these types of ‘candies’ at banquets for their guests. One of these candies, sometimes called chamber spice, was made with cloves, ginger, aniseed, juniper berries, almonds and pine kernels dipped in melted sugar.[11]

The Middle English word candy began to be used in the late 13th century.[12][13]

The first candy came to America during the early 18th century from Britain and France. Only a few of the early colonists were proficient in sugar work and sugary treats were generally only enjoyed by the very wealthy. Even the simplest form of candy – rock candy, made from crystallized sugar – was considered a luxury.[14]

Industrial Revolution

The candy business underwent a drastic change in the 1830s when technological advances and the availability of sugar opened up the market. The new market was not only for the enjoyment of the rich but also for the pleasure of the working class. There was also an increasing market for children. While some fine confectioners remained, the candy store became a staple of the child of the American working class. Penny candies epitomized this transformation of candy. Penny candy became the first material good that children spent their own money on. For this reason, candy store-owners relied almost entirely on the business of children to keep them running. Even penny candies were directly descended from medicated lozenges that held bitter medicine in a hard sugar coating.[15]

In 1847, the invention of the candy press (also known under the surprising name of a toy machine) made it possible to produce multiple shapes and sizes of candy at once. In 1851, confectioners began to use a revolving steam pan to assist in boiling sugar. This transformation meant that the candy maker was no longer required to continuously stir the boiling sugar. The heat from the surface of the pan was also much more evenly distributed and made it less likely the sugar would burn. These innovations made it possible for only one or two people to successfully run a candy business.[14]

Our Mutual Friend, January 7, 1885, satirical cartoon by Joseph Keppler, warning of the dangers of color additives used in candy.

As the path from producer to market became increasingly complicated, many foods were affected by adulteration and the addition of additives which ranged from relatively harmless ingredients, such as cheap cornstarch and corn syrup, to poisonous ones. Some manufacturers produced bright colors in candy by the addition of hazardous substances for which there was no legal regulation: green (chromium(III) oxide and copper acetate), red (lead(II,IV) oxide and mercury sulfide), yellow (lead chromate) and white (chalk, arsenic trioxide).[16]

In an 1885 cover cartoon for Puck, Joseph Keppler satirized the dangers of additives in candy by depicting the «mutual friendship» between striped candy, doctors, and gravediggers. By 1906, research into the dangers of additives, exposés of the food industry, and public pressure led to the passage of the Pure Food and Drug Act, the first federal United States law to regulate food and drugs, including candy.[16]

Association to Halloween

To this day, the process of going door to door to receive free candy during Halloween-time has become a major draw for children all across America. It is the one day of the year that ringing a neighbor’s doorbell is socially acceptable. Children across the country will continually dress up in costume and go door to door. In turn, the residents of each house graciously buy candy for children and hand it out in small increments. Just as it had been in the mid-1970s, the main form of candy that is passed out is pre-packaged sweets. Parents feel much more easy minded allowing their children to eat pre-packaged candies because of the quality control that comes with each product. As a result, name brand candies have become a staple for Halloween and trick-or-treating up to the present. Some candies continue to be popular with trick-or-treaters, such as Reese’s Cups, Kit Kat, and Snickers, which were the top three halloween candies of 2022.[17]

The tradition of handing out treats on Halloween originated from the holiday of All Hallows Day, or All Saints Day, which derives from Christian tradition. On this day, children would travel across town, saying prayers along the way. These children prayed mainly for all people who had passed away. In between their prayers, these children would also arrive at the doorsteps of people within their town. As a reward for their actions, they were given homemade cakes referred to as soul cakes, made by the homeowners. These soul cakes resembled a form of biscuit and were usually filled with raisins or cinnamon among other ingredients. Many cakes were also given to the poor during this time. The soul cakes gave these children the incentive to pray intensely in exchange for sweets.[18]

The idea of providing trick-or-treaters with candy was not fully conceptualized until the 1950s. Up until that point many households continued to provide children with soul cakes among other homemade goods. However, it was discovered by numerous candy producers that the holiday of Halloween could be marketed to sell their products. As a result, many households began to buy candy products. The main draw to these candy products were that they were inexpensive, took no time to prepare, and came in bulk. Nevertheless, candy would not completely take over until the 1970s. Up until that point, givers would continue to make treats or package small toys and coins specifically for Halloween.[19]

The main cause for the shift from homemade treats to pre-packaged candies was the result of speculation concerning tampered food. Many parents during this time were concerned that their children were being exposed to needles or toxic chemicals within their halloween goods. The lack of packaging made it much easier for a person to put dangerous substances into the food they were planning to give out. These worries were heightened because of a large number of false reports concerning medical attention relating to dangerous halloween treats. As a result, parents became much more likely to allow their children to participate in Halloween festivities when packed candy was introduced. They noticed that it would be much harder for a person to tamper with factory packaged sweets because the seal would be torn. It would be too noticeable if someone tried to affect the product.[20]

Judging from recent statistics, it is evident that Halloween candy is still at high demand. In 2021 alone, profits from halloween candy were up to at least «$324 million». From the same report, the demand for halloween candy was «up 59.8% from 2019». From these numbers it can be presumed that Halloween is still a big deal for Americans. An even bigger deal for the American public is the act of receiving candy from trick-or-treating. Candy continues to be a staple for the Halloween season and remains the biggest draw for participation.

[21]

Classification

Sugar candies include hard candies, soft candies, caramels, marshmallows, taffy, and other candies whose principal ingredient is sugar. Commercially, sugar candies are often divided into groups according to the amount of sugar they contain and their chemical structure.[23]

Hard-boiled candies made by the vacuum cooking process include stick candy, lemon drops and horehound drops. Open-fire candy, like molasses taffy and cream taffy, is cooked in open kettles and then pulled. Pan work candies include nuts and other candies like jelly beans and sugar-coated almonds, made by coating with sugar in revolving copper kettles. Gum work candy is cooked in large kettles fashioned for melting and molded, dried and sugared like gum drops. They are soaked for a time in sugar syrup to allow crystals to form.[24]

  • Comparison of sugar candies
  • Small, knobby pieces of candy, in different colors

    Konpeitō is a traditional Japanese sugar candy. When finished, it is almost 100% solid sugar.

  • Fruit-shaped hard candy is a common type of sugar candy, containing sugar, color, flavor, and a tiny bit of water.

    Fruit-shaped hard candy is a common type of sugar candy, containing sugar, color, flavor, and a tiny bit of water.

  • Ten flat squares of chikki. The different colors and textures are due to each square being made from a different type of nut or seed.

    Chikki are homemade nut brittles popular in India. Between the nuts or seeds is hard sugar candy.

  • Fudge is a type of sugar candy that is made by mixing and heating sugar, butter and milk.

    Fudge is a type of sugar candy that is made by mixing and heating sugar, butter and milk.

  • A pile of disk-shaped, sugar-coated, rubbery candies in red, green, orange, and mostly black

    Pantteri is a soft, chewy Finnish sugar candy. The colored ones are fruity, while black are salmiakki (salty licorice-flavored).

Chocolate is sometimes treated as a separate branch of confectionery.[25] In this model, chocolate candies like chocolate candy bars and chocolate truffles are included. Hot chocolate or other cocoa-based drinks are excluded, as is candy made from white chocolate. However, when chocolate is treated as a separate branch, it also includes confections whose classification is otherwise difficult, being neither exactly candies nor exactly baked goods, like chocolate-dipped foods, tarts with chocolate shells, and chocolate-coated cookies.

  • Comparison of chocolate types

Sugar candies can be classified into noncrystalline and crystalline types. Noncrystalline candies are homogeneous and may be chewy or hard; they include hard candies, caramels, toffees, and nougats. Crystalline candies incorporate small crystals in their structure, are creamy that melt in the mouth or are easily chewed; they include fondant and fudge.[26]

Production

White disk-shaped candies

Batasha is one of the many traditional candies found in South Asia. Flavored varieties include nuts and mint

Sugar candy is made by dissolving sugar in water or milk to form a syrup, which is boiled until it reaches the desired concentration or starts to caramelize. Candy comes in a wide variety of textures, from soft and chewy to hard and brittle. The texture of candy depends on the ingredients and the temperatures that the candy is processed at.

The final texture of sugar candy depends primarily on the concentration of sugar. As the syrup is heated, it boils, water evaporates, the sugar concentration increases and the boiling point rises. A given temperature corresponds to a particular sugar concentration. These are called sugar stages. In general, higher temperatures and greater sugar concentrations result in hard, brittle candies, and lower temperatures result in softer candies.[27] Once the syrup reaches 171 °C (340 °F) or higher, the sucrose molecules break down into many simpler sugars, creating an amber-colored substance known as caramel. This should not be confused with caramel candy, although it is the candy’s main flavoring.

A booth selling candy

Most candies are made commercially. The industry relies significantly on trade secret protection, because candy recipes cannot be copyrighted or patented effectively, but are very difficult to duplicate exactly. Seemingly minor differences in the machinery, temperature, or timing of the candy-making process can cause noticeable differences in the final product.[28]

Packaging

A box of chocolates, usually given as a gift.

Candy wrapper or sweets wrapper is a common term for this packaging.[29]

Purposes of packaging

Packaging preserves aroma and flavor and eases shipping and dispensation. Wax paper seals against air, moisture, dust, and germs, while cellophane is valued by packagers for its transparency and resistance to grease, odors and moisture. In addition, it is often resealable. Polyethylene is another form of film sealed with heat, and this material is often used to make bags in bulk packaging. Plastic wraps are also common. Aluminum foils wrap chocolate bars and prevent a transfer of water vapor while being lightweight, non-toxic and odor proof. Vegetable parchment lines boxes of high-quality confections like gourmet chocolates. Cardboard cartons are less common, though they offer many options concerning thickness and movement of water and oil.

Packages are often sealed with a starch-based adhesive derived from tapioca, potato, wheat, sago, or sweet potato. Occasionally, glues are made from the bones and skin of cattle and hogs for a stronger and more flexible product, but this is not as common because of the expense.[30]

History

Prior to the 1900s, candy was commonly sold unwrapped from carts in the street, where it was exposed to dirt and insects. By 1914, there were some machines to wrap gum and stick candies, but this was not the common practice. After the polio outbreak in 1916, unwrapped candies garnered widespread censure because of the dirt and germs. At the time, only upscale candy stores used glass jars. With advancements in technology, wax paper was adopted, and foil and cellophane were imported to the U.S. from France by DuPont in 1925. Necco packagers were one of the first companies to package without human touch.[31] Kiosks and vending machines were introduced around the beginning of the 20th century.[32]

Candy packaging played a role in its adoption as the most popular treat given away during trick-or-treating for Halloween in the US. In the 1940s, most treats were homemade. During the 1950s, small, individually wrapped candies were recognized as convenient and inexpensive. By the 1970s, after widely publicized but largely false stories of poisoned candy myths circulating in the popular press, factory-sealed packaging with a recognizable name brand on it became a sign of safety.[33]

Marketing and design

Packaging helps market the product as well. Manufacturers know that candy must be hygienic and attractive to customers. In the children’s market quantity, novelty, large size and bright colors are the top sellers.[31] Many companies redesign the packaging to maintain consumer appeal.

Shelf life

Because of its high sugar concentration, bacteria are not usually able to grow in candy. As a result, the shelf life is longer for candy than for many other foods. Most candies can be safely stored in their original packaging at room temperature in a dry, dark cupboard for months or years. As a rule, the softer the candy or the damper the storage area, the sooner it goes stale.[34]

Shelf life considerations with most candies are focused on appearance, taste, and texture, rather than about the potential for food poisoning; that is, old candy may not look appealing or taste very good, even though it is very unlikely to make the eater sick. Candy can be made unsafe by storing it badly, such as in a wet, moldy area. Typical recommendations are these:[34]

  • Hard candy may last indefinitely in good storage conditions.
  • Dark chocolate lasts up to two years.
  • Milk chocolates and caramels usually become stale after about one year.
  • Soft or creamy candies, like candy corn, may last 8 to 10 months in ideal conditions.
  • Chewing gum and gumballs may stay fresh as long as 8 months after manufacture.

Nutrition

Caramels, candy made from butter, milk and sugar, have little nutritional value.

Most sugar candies are defined in US law as a food of minimal nutritional value.[35]

Even in a culture that eats sweets frequently, candy is not a significant source of nutrition or food energy for most people. The average American eats about 1.1 kg (2.5 pounds) of sugar or similar sweeteners each week, but almost 95% of that sugar—all but about 70 grams (2.5 ounces)—comes from non-candy sources, especially soft drinks and processed foods.[36]

Meal replacements

Candy is considered a source of empty calories, because it provides little or no nutritional value beyond food energy. At the start of the 20th century, when undernutrition was a serious problem, especially among poor and working-class people, and when nutrition science was a new field, the high calorie content was promoted as a virtue. Researchers suggested that candy, especially candy made with milk and nuts, was a low-cost alternative to normal meals. To get the food energy necessary for a day of labor, candy might cost half as much as eggs.[37] During the 1920s and 1930s, candy bars selling for five cents were often marketed as replacements for lunch.[38]

At the 1904 World Fair, the Quaker Oats Company made a candy-coated puffed cereal, a wheat-based product similar to Cracker Jack’s candy-coated popcorn. The product concept was re-introduced unsuccessfully in 1939 by another business as Ranger Joe, the first pre-sweetened, candy-coated breakfast cereal. Post Foods introduced their own version in 1948, originally called Happy Jax and later Sugar Crisp. They marketed it as both a replacement for unsweetened breakfast cereals and also for eating as a snack or as candy, using three animated cartoon bears as the mascots: Candy, Handy, and Dandy. The early slogans said, «As a cereal it’s dandy—for snacks it’s so handy—or eat it like candy!»[39]

In more recent times, a variety of snack bars have been marketed. These include bars that are intended as meal replacements as well as snack bars that are marketed as having nutritional advantages when compared to candy bars, such as granola bars. However, the actual nutritional value is often not very different from candy bars, except for usually a higher sodium content, and the flavors (most popularly, chocolate, fudge, and caramel) and the presentation mimic candy bars.[38]

Among the Bengali people, candy may be eaten for an entire meal, especially during festivals. Candy may also be offered to vegetarian guests in lieu of fish or meat dishes in India.[40]

Vegetarianism

Most candy contains no meat or other animal parts, and many contain no milk or other animal products. Some candy, including marshmallows and gummi bears, contains gelatin derived from animal collagen, a protein found in skin and bones, and is thus avoided by vegans and some vegetarians. «Kosher gelatin» is also unsuitable for vegetarians and vegans, as it is derived from fish bones.[41] Other substances, such as agar, pectin, starch and gum arabic may also be used as setting and gelling agents, and can be used in place of gelatin.

Other ingredients commonly found in candy that are not suitable for vegetarian or vegan diets include carmine, a red dye made from cochineal beetles, and confectioner’s glaze, which contains shellac, a resin excreted by female lac bugs.

Health effects

Cavities

Candy generally contains sugar, which is a key environmental factor in the formation of dental caries (cavities).[42] Several types of bacteria commonly found in the mouth consume sugar, particularly Streptococcus mutans. When these bacteria metabolize the sugar found in most candies, juice, or other sugary foods, they produce acids in the mouth that demineralize the tooth enamel and can lead to dental caries. Heavy or frequent consumption of high-sugar foods, especially lollipops, sugary cough drops, and other sugar-based candies that stay in the mouth for a long time, increases the risk of tooth decay.[42][43] Candies that also contain enamel-dissolving acids, such as acid drops, increase the risk.[43] Cleaning the teeth and mouth shortly after eating any type of sugary food, and allowing several hours to pass between eating such foods, reduces the risk and improves oral health.[42][43]

However, frequent consumption of fruits and fruit juice, which contain both acid and sugars, may be a more significant factor in dental decay than candies.[43]

Glycemic index

Most candy, particularly low-fat and fat-free candy, has a high glycemic index (GI), which means that it causes a rapid rise in blood sugar levels after ingestion. This is chiefly a concern for people with diabetes, but could also be dangerous to the health of non-diabetics.[44]

Contamination

Some kinds of candy have been contaminated with an excessive amount of lead in it.[45] Claims of contamination have been made since shortly after industrial-scale candy factories began producing candy in the mid-19th century, although these early claims were rarely true.[46]

Choking deaths

Hard, round candies are a leading cause of choking deaths in children.[47] Some types of candy, such as Lychee Mini Fruity Gels, have been associated with so many choking deaths that their import or manufacture is banned by some countries.[47][48]

Non-nutritive toy products such as chocolate eggs containing packaging with a toy inside are banned from sale in the US. If the material attached to confectionery has a function and will not cause any injury to the consumer, it is allowed to be marketed. In the EU, however, the Toy Safety Directive 2009/48/EC specifies that toys contained in food only need separate packaging that cannot be swallowed.[49]

Sales

All assorted M&M candies in tubes at signature shop in New York

All assorted M&M candies at New York shop

Global sales of candies were estimated to have been approximately US$118 billion in 2012.[50] In the United States, $2 is spent on chocolate for every $1 spent on non-chocolate candy.[51]

Because each culture varies in how it treats some foods, a food may be considered a candy in one place and a dessert in another. For example, in Western countries, baklava is served on a plate and eaten with a fork as a dessert, but in the Middle East, Northern Africa, and Eastern Europe, it is treated as a candy.[2]

Cultural significance

Candy is the source of several cultural themes.

Adults worry that other people will use candy to poison or entice children into harmful situations. Stranger danger warnings include telling children not to take candy from strangers, for fear of the child being abducted. Poisoned candy myths persist in popular culture, especially around trick-or-treating at Halloween, despite the rarity of actual incidents.[46]

The phrase like taking candy from a baby is a common simile, and means that something is very easy to do.[46]

A 1959 Swedish dental health campaign encouraged people to reduce the risk of dental problems by limiting consumption of candy to once a week. The slogan, «All the sweets you want, but only once a week», started a tradition of buying candy every Saturday, called lördagsgodis (literally «Saturday candy»).[52]

See also

  • Candy making
  • List of candies
  • List of desserts
  • List of top-selling candy brands

Notes

  1. ^ «Candy» is used chiefly in Canada and the US, «sweets» in the UK and Ireland, and «lollies» in Australia and New Zealand.[1]

References

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External links

  • Candy Wrapper Museum – Extensive photo archive
  • National Confectioners Association – Information on a variety of candies
  • Science of Candy – Descriptions and videos of hardness stages
  • 33 Unique Treats From All Around the World in The New York Times
candy
конфеты, сладости
(1). Candy — наиболее употребительно как собирательное существительное в американском варианте английского языка. Как правило, candy употребляется с глаголом в единственном числе и определяется словами much, little, some, any. В британском варианте употребительнее слово sweets, с которым глагол может быть как в единственном, так и во множественном числе.
(2). Candy как собирательное существительное может иногда осмысляться как исчисляемое и в этом случае может употребляться во множественном числе:

cookies and candies — печенье и сладости.

English-Russian word troubles.
2014.

Смотреть что такое «candy» в других словарях:

  • Candy — steht für: Werke: Candy (Southern), ein Roman von Terry Southern aus dem Jahr 1958 Candy (1968), auf dem Roman von Terry Southern basierender Spielfilm unter der Regie von Christian Marquand Lovin Candy (Originaltitel: Candy: A Novel of Love and… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Candy — Hoover Group Год основания 1945 Расположение …   Википедия

  • Candy-O — Candy O …   Википедия

  • Candy — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Candy puede referirse a: Candy, canción del músico estadounidense Iggy Pop; Candy, canción de la cantante estadounidense Mandy Moore; Candy, película estadounidense dirigida por Christian Marquand y protagonizada por …   Wikipedia Español

  • Candy — Can dy (k[a^]n d[y^]), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Candied} (k[a^]n d[=e]d); p. pr & vb. n. {Candying}.] [F. candir (cf. It. candire, Sp. az[ u]car cande or candi), fr. Ar. & Pers. qand, fr. Skr. Kha[.n][.d]da piece, sugar in pieces or lumps, fr.… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Candy 66 — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Candy 66 Información personal Origen Caracas, Venezuela …   Wikipedia Español

  • Candy — f English (esp. U.S.): from an affectionate nickname derived from the vocabulary word candy confectionery. The word candy is from French sucre candi ‘candied sugar’, i.e. sugar boiled to make a crystalline sweet. The French word is derived from… …   First names dictionary

  • candy — [kan′dē] n. pl. candies [< sugar candy < ME (sugre) candi < OFr (sucre) candi < OIt ( zucchero) candi < Ar qandi < Pers qand, cane sugar; prob. < Sans khaṇḍa, piece (of sugar)] 1. crystallized sugar made by boiling and… …   English World dictionary

  • Candy — (Пуэрто Игуасу,Аргентина) Категория отеля: 1 звездочный отель Адрес: Av. Cordoba 412, 3308 Пуэрто Игуасу …   Каталог отелей

  • Candy — Can dy (k[a^]n d[y^]), v. i. 1. To have sugar crystals form in or on; as, fruits preserved in sugar candy after a time. [1913 Webster] 2. To be formed into candy; to solidify in a candylike form or mass. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • candy — late 13c., crystalized sugar, from O.Fr. çucre candi sugar candy, ultimately from Arabic qandi, from Pers. qand cane sugar, probably from Skt. khanda piece (of sugar), perhaps from Dravidian (Cf. Tamil kantu candy, kattu to harden, condense ). As …   Etymology dictionary

Candy – Word of the day - EVS Translations
Candy – Word of the day – EVS Translations

In 1965, an American musical band, The Strangeloves (pretending to be Australian in order to attract publicity) had a hit song that encapsulated what was quickly becoming a global truism: I want candy. In reply to that statement, well, who doesn’t? To a varying degree, everyone has a sweet tooth, whether it be for hard sugar candies, caramel, liquorice or the all-time favourite – chocolate. Before you bite into that Cadbury’s Flake bar or pop a Rowntree’s jelly into your mouth, let’s take a second to think about where the word for that sweet indulgence comes from.

While the term candy arrived in Middle English in the late 13th century from the Old French çucre candi, literally meaning “sugar candy,” it goes back much further. Before the French combined it with the word for sugar, the Arabs called it quandi, which came from the Persian qand, which was an adaptation of the Sanskrit word khanda, meaning “a piece of sugar.” Interestingly, as one can see going back through the languages, the understanding and use of the word sugar follows the exposure to sugarcane, which, in the ancient world, was described as “reeds those produce honey without bees.”

Candy market

Though, throughout most of its history, candy has been a confectionery for the upper classes, thanks to mass production, it is now a daily indulgence which virtually anyone can afford- and afford it we do. The three largest candy companies in the world- Mars, Mondelez International (who currently own Cadbury), and Nestle- had nearly £28 billion in combined sales in 2014. Additionally, the global appetite for British sweets seems to only be growing: 2013 saw more than 150,000 tonnes of British candy exported to 143 countries, resulting in adding £1.1 billion to the UK’s economy.

The first known use of the word candy comes from around 1475, in the Liber Cure Cocorum, where it is written that, “With sugar candy, thou may hit sweet.” Logically, the first use of the word candy in its stand-alone form comes from a cookery book, Elizabeth Raffald’s 1769 The Experienced English Housekeeper, where one of her 800 recipes states that, “To a Pound of double refined Sugar put two Spoonfuls of Water, skim it well, and boil it almost to a Candy, when it is cold, drain your Plumbs out of the first Syrup, and put them in the thick Syrup.” Finally, circa 1809, we can see candy taking it’s familiar form of an everyday treat, as is suggested in John Foster’s Letters & Correspondences, when he writes of “handing round candies and cowslip wine.”


How Do You Spell Candy In 2 Letters Riddle Answer: How Do You Spell Candy In 2 Letters is the latest riddle trending on Twitter, Facebook, and WhatsApp. People from across the globe are participating in this riddle and trying to find the correct answer to it. The riddle has proved itself to be one of the best puzzles and a good way to spend quality time during the current lockdown situation.

So here in this article we are going to solve and provide the How Do You Spell Candy In 2 Letters Riddle Answer along with the explanation. In the meanwhile, you can also check a similar riddle here. So, without wasting any further time, let’s get started.

How Do You Spell Candy In 2 Letters Riddle

The riddle reads: How Do You Spell Candy In 2 Letters

How Do You Spell Candy In 2 Letters Riddle Answer

The correct answer to How Do You Spell Candy In 2 Letters Riddle is C and Y

How Do You Spell Candy In 2 Letters Riddle Solution, Explanation

How Do You Spell Candy In 2 Letters is a carefully written statement with the answer within the statement itself. Here the statement asks you to spell the word Candy in 2 letters.

When you break the word CANDY, you will get C (and) Y. Here we are not going to consider and because it is used to link two or more letters, words, groups, or clauses.

Therefore, How Do You Spell Candy In 2 Letters answer is C and Y.

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