Dorito
English
Etymology
Marketing coinage, likely from Spanish dorar (“to gild”), dorado (“golden”), with an ending matching other brands of Frito-Lay Inc. (Cheetos, Fritos, Tostitos), from Spanish frito (“fried”), also possibly as a clipping of Spanish doradito (“little golden [thing]”), diminutive of dorado (“golden”).
Pronunciation
Audio (US): (file)
Noun
Dorito (plural Doritos)
- A tortilla chip of the Doritos brand.
- 1991, Ellen Emerson White, “The Boy Next Door”, in Thirteen: Thirteen Tales of Horror, page 302:
- [Timmy] offered her his bag of Doritos.
- 2010, Stacy Alaimo, Bodily Natures: Science, Environment, and the Material Self, page 12:
- I looked out the kitchen window at my garden, my trenches, my dirt, and then my gaze turned downward toward my Dorito-stained hand.
- 2013, Pamela Yaye, Games of the Heart:
- Stuffing the last Dorito chip into her mouth, she brushed the salt from her hands.