The term has been largely superseded by "gourmet", which is also the older word, borrowed into English in 1820.
That is the only element borrowed into the film from a Christie story.
Both names have been borrowed into multiple other languages, giving rise to various local forms.
"Well, they wouldn't have had to if the conservatives hadn't borrowed and spent the government into bankruptcy."
There is some evidence that the details of this legend have been borrowed or blurred into other legends.
It is not clear why the meaning shifted to the parent-child relationship when borrowed back into English.
An Anglicism is a word borrowed from English into another language.
She pushed the entire six hundred dollars she had borrowed from John into the middle of the table.
The word ballet comes from French and was borrowed into English around the 17th century.
It can also be used to mean a word borrowed into another language from Latin, especially one deemed overly pretentious.