Glossary entry

Japanese term or phrase:

中具

English translation:

filling ingredients

Added to glossary by nhalenguyenanh
Feb 4, 2012 07:00
12 yrs ago
Japanese term

中具

Japanese to English Other Food & Drink
this term also appears in a seafood information sheet, its specific context is as follows:
中具(50%): shrimp, pH regulator, salt ... white leg shrimp, onion etc.

I can just guess this term has something to do with "具材", but I'm not sure about its true meaning.
Can anybody help me? thank you so much?
References
FYI

Discussion

nhalenguyenanh (asker) Feb 5, 2012:
Well, literally, I rather suspect that the word 中 should have something to do with "filling", but the term "sub-ingredients" also somehow makes sense

Proposed translations

11 mins
Japanese term (edited): 中具(中身具材)
Selected

filling ingredients

a guess

--------------------------------------------------
Note added at 1 day56 mins (2012-02-05 07:57:17 GMT)
--------------------------------------------------

http://ci.nii.ac.jp/naid/110008160353
http://www.iishina-shop.com/item/dog_food/info.php
http://www.kashrut.com/articles/LabelingLaw/
http://w.livedoor.jp/shininghearts/d/�ѥ�쥷��
http://www.mr-cook.net/chinese/syourompou_1.php
http://www.ehow.com/video_2333079_filling-ingredients-new-yo...
http://vegetarian.about.com/od/cookingtipstools/ss/Howtospri...

--------------------------------------------------
Note added at 1 day59 mins (2012-02-05 07:59:45 GMT)
--------------------------------------------------

or just 'ingredients'
http://sooda.jp/qa/362593
http://photozou.jp/photo/show/1721984/111995580
Something went wrong...
4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer. Comment: "Thank you so much for your answers!"
2 hrs

sub ingredients(or)ingredient components

The sub ingredients of a food that is an ingredient in another food may be declared parenthetically following the name of the ingredient ...

www.fda.gov/food/.../guidancedocuments/.../ucm064880.htm

--------------------------------------------------
Note added at 8 hrs (2012-02-04 15:53:14 GMT)
--------------------------------------------------

In most developed countries, the law requires that ingredients be listed according to their relative weight[1] in the product. If an ingredient itself consists of more than one ingredient (such as the cookie pieces which are a part of "cookies and cream" flavor ice cream), then that ingredient is listed by what percentage of the total product it occupies, with its own ingredients displayed next to it in brackets...

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ingredient

--------------------------------------------------
Note added at 9 hrs (2012-02-04 16:44:39 GMT)
--------------------------------------------------

Please ignore "ingredient components"



--------------------------------------------------
Note added at 9 hrs (2012-02-04 16:46:30 GMT)
--------------------------------------------------

Multi-component ingredients

If you have a multi-component ingredient, such as chocolate, you can do a parenthetical listing of all ingredients within the ingredient.

www.otmenu.com/index.php/.../fda_compliant_ingredient_state...
Something went wrong...

Reference comments

9 mins
Term search
  • All of ProZ.com
  • Term search
  • Jobs
  • Forums
  • Multiple search