The sudden drowsy, sleepy sluggishness that comes over you after a big meal.
The sudden drowsy, sleepy sluggishness that comes over you after a big meal — the “food coma.”
Names a specific bodily event — the post-prandial wave of heaviness and the temptation to nap — not general tiredness, peaceful repose, or emotional contentment. Physical and transient; idiomatic avere/venire l'abbiocco (“to get the abbiocco”), most strongly tied to after lunch.
From the verb abbioccarsi “to huddle/doze,” itself from biocca “a brooding hen.”
Derived from abbioccarsi (“to settle down to brood like a hen; to flop down, doze off”), from biocca “brooding/mother hen.”
A colloquial, originally central-Italian word, stable as “post-meal sleepiness”; its spread into national informal usage is the main development.
A staple of “untranslatable food-culture” lists; the “uniquely Italian feeling” framing overstates it (food coma is universal), but the lexicalization is genuine and Treccani-attested.