51³Ô¹Ï

Slang dictionary

¨¤ la

or a la or ala [ah lah, ah luh]

What does?¨¤ la?mean?

Borrowed from French, ¨¤?±ô²¹ means “according to” or “in the manner of,” e.g., everyday, observational humor ¨¤ la Jerry Seinfeld (as Jerry Seinfeld would make jokes). In cooking, ¨¤ la refers to a way of preparing a dish, e.g.,?chicken ¨¤ la proven?ale (as traditionally cooked in Provence).

Related words

sacr¨¦ bleu, c'est la vie, mon ch¨¦ri, ?? Flag for France emoji, ? Croissant emoji, ?? Fleur-de-lis emoji

Where does ¨¤ la come from?

Flying Tiger Antiques

The prepositional phrase ¨¤ la comes from French, where it means “according to the,” “in the manner of the,” or “to the.” What follows “the” (la;?¨¤ variously means “to, at, in, etc.”) in French is a feminine noun or adjective. For instance, tarte ¨¤ la rhubarbe is “rhubarb pie” while the 2019 film L’Adieu ¨¤ la nuit?is “Goodbye to the Night.”

? la was recorded in English by the late 16th century. It appears in a few common phrases English also borrowed from French: ¨¤ la mode, used in English to mean “in the current fashion, fashionable.” Pie ¨¤ la mode is pie (or other desserts) topped with ice cream, once a fancy trend to describe such desserts starting in the late 1800s.

Breyers

Another culinary ¨¤ la appears in ¨¤ la carte (French, “according to the menu”), referring to ordering items on a menu separately and at their own price (i.e., you don’t have to order a fixed meal, but just the foods you want).

? la carte can be now used figuratively to describe someone who picks some things out of a larger set, e.g., an ¨¤ la carte Catholic who (conveniently) believes in some aspects of the religion, but not others. ? la carte television refers to customers paying for just channels they want, rather they having to pay for a whole (cable) service.

Examples of ¨¤ la

Meat?¨¤ la Bordelaise?was served with a red wine and beef broth sauce, originating from the French region of Bordeaux.
Annie Ewbank, Atlas Obscura, April 2018
I haven¡¯t thought as carefully about this as you but I think for years people were saying Microsoft needed to embrace the fact that it¡¯s an enterprise company and stop trying to chase consumers a la Google and Apple ...
@jyarow, April 2019
thechurch.ie
SEE MORE EXAMPLES

Who uses ¨¤ la?

In English, ¨¤ la?has become an useful shorthand to indicate something (art, music, writing, etc.) is done in a manner or style similar to something else. In this way, ¨¤ la?is not unlike e.g., (“for example”)?or like/as in. What follows ¨¤ la?is often an artist, public figure, or cultural product, e.g., a nostalgic teen sci-fi drama ¨¤ la Stranger Things.

As noted, you’ll also encounter ¨¤ la?in culinary contexts, naming specific dishes or styles of preparation. One is chicken ¨¤ la king, supposedly named for E. Clark King, a New York hotel owner. Some people may apply ¨¤ la?in their own cooking for an ironic flourish.

Because English users don’t know or don’t want to use (especially online) French accent markings, ¨¤ la?often gets spelled just?a la?or even as ala (or wrongly marked as ¨¢ la, a’ la), which can make it easily confused with an abbreviation for, say, Alabama (Ala.) or organization names, such as the American Library Association (ALA).

Some writers may put ¨¤ la in italics to show it is a foreign phrase, but it has become familiar in English that it necessarily doesn’t require italics.

Just Added

quietcation, trendjacking, boomerasking, Maycember, cozy mystery

Note

This is not meant to be a formal definition of ¨¤ la like most terms we define on Dictionary.com, but is rather an informal word summary that hopefully touches upon the key aspects of the meaning and usage of ¨¤ la that will help our users expand their word mastery.