escargot如何读

英:[eskɑr'gɒ]

美:[eskɑr'gɒ]

escargot是什么意思

  • n.(法语)食用蜗牛

escargot变形

复数:escargots

escargot英英释义

  • n.edible terrestrial snail usually served in the shell with a sauce of melted butter and garlic

escargot词源中文解释

"可食用的蜗牛",1892年,来自法语 escargot,源自古法语 escargol "蜗牛"(14世纪),来自普罗旺斯语 escaragol,最终源自拉丁通俗语 *coculium,源自古典拉丁语 conchylium "可食用的贝类,牡蛎"(参见 cockle(n.1))。普罗旺斯语和法语中的单词形式似乎受到与 scarab 相关的词汇的影响。

escargot词源英文解释

borrowed from French, "snail," going back to Middle French escargol, borrowed from an Old Occitan antecedent of Occitan (17th-century Toulouse) escaragol, (Marseille) escaragóou, (Béarn) escargolh, alteration (perhaps by association with Old Occitan escaravat "scarab beetle" and other descendants of Latin scarabaeus scarab) of Old Occitan carcol "spiral staircase," Occitan (Rhône mouth) kalagou, karagǫu "snail," with parallel forms in Ibero-Romance (Spanish caracol "snail, gastropod, shell of a gastropod, caracole", Portuguese caracol "snail, gastropod," Galician caracó, Catalan caragol "gastropod, something with a spiral shape, helix"), of uncertain origin Note: The Occitan forms can be explained as metathetic variants of kakaláw "snail, empty nutshell" (Bas-Dauphiné, i.e., western Dauphiné), cacaláou "snail" (Provence), cagarol (Béziers), apparently based on *cocŭlia "shell of a mollusk, nut or egg" blended with another word (see cockle >entry 2). However, there is no counterpart to the unmetathesized words in Ibero-Romance, so one would have to accept that caracol, etc., were loanwords from Occitan, a somewhat unusual migration given that this sort of expressive vocabulary would more likely be native and perhaps substratal. It has been hypothesized that the word with which *cocŭlia has been blended is Greek káchlēx "shingle, gravel in a riverbed," though this word has otherwise apparently left no other trace in Romance. Another suggestion is an expressive and/or pre-Romance element *cacar- "shell of a mollusk," an extension of a root *cac(c)-/*coc(c)-, or perhaps more likely *car- "shell." (See J. Hubschmid, "Die Stämme *kar(r)- und *kurr- im Iberoromanischen, Baskischen und Inselkeltischen," Romance Philology, vol. 13, no. 1 [August, 1959], p. 39; J. Coromines, Diccionario crítico etimológico castellano e hispánico, s.v. caracol.)

The first known use of escargot was circa 1892

escargot儿童词典英英释义

escudonoun

the formerly used basic unit of money of Portugal

a coin representing one escudo

escrownoun

something (as a deed or a sum of money) delivered by one person to another to be delivered by the second to a third party only upon the fulfillment of a condition

escort1 of 2noun

a person or group of persons accompanying another to give protection or show courtesy

the man who goes on a date with a woman

a protective screen of vehicles, warships, or planes fighter escort

motorcycle escort

escort2 of 2verb

to go along with as an escort

escort1 of 2noun

a person or group of persons accompanying another to give protection or show courtesy

the man who goes on a date with a woman

a protective screen of vehicles, warships, or planes fighter escort

motorcycle escort

escort2 of 2verb

to go along with as an escort

eschewverb

shun, avoid

escarpmentnoun

a steep slope in front of a fort or defensive area

a long cliff

escarolenoun

endive with broad flat leaves used especially cooked as a vegetable

escargotnoun

a snail prepared for use as food

escargotnoun

a snail prepared for use as food

escargot 例句

1 Flambée, a French restaurant in Bogotá popular with diplomats and businesspeople, was for weeks selling homemade Dijon for around $7 a jar, roughly twice the usual price, alongside its lavish offerings of escargot and pâté.

2 It also might help out if your companion orders escargots, heavy on the garlic.

3 Klein goes on to namecheck escargots, fish and chips, and paella (presumably courting votes from France, England, and Spain, respectively).

4 The irony concerns En Sabah Nur, who decides, on a whim, to winkle all the nuclear weapons on Earth from their silos, like a Frenchman calmly working his way through a platter of escargots.

5 Escargot is imported from Japan, where the quality and the taste is better than the local's.

日本田螺是特别从日本引进,吃起来味道与品质都比本地来得好。

6 Only in affluent parts of town would you find remoulades, Merguez sausage, escargot and French fries fried in rendered duck fat.

7 Squeezed into the store and serving unlikely Texas truck stop fare like escargot and rack of lamb, Chef Point Café attracts local residents and culinary tourists alike.

8 Madame’s culinary chauvinism, in contrast, seems as dated and stereotypical as the frog’s legs and escargots on her menu, and the film’s assumptions about gender and cooking.

9 And wan escargots, served de-shelled in puddles of butter, could use a touch more garlic.

10 People watch with mild interest through the glass wall of the Stratosphere crown—well-dressed people eating escargot and drinking radiation as their restaurant slowly revolves—and I realize I’m part of the evening’s entertainment.

11 Convivial expands on the notion with the aforementioned escargots: sauteed snails, pureed spinach and chicken mousse bound in egg roll wrappers and fried to an audible crackle.

12 They tried escargot for the first time and got caught up in conversation until a friend of Shaina’s — her safety net — interrupted the date.

13 The first actions are expected Monday, as truckers are being urged to block major highway arteries and interchanges in go-slow actions dubbed ‘’escargot’’ operations.

14 “Before the date I really wanted to try the escargot,” Jamie said.

15 They’re nothing like escargot, where someone took a snail and gave it a fancy name.

16 Even though it sounds weird, I recommend you try escargot.

虽然这听上去很怪异,但是我建议你品尝一下蜗牛。

17 Most Americans are familiar with the French version of snails: escargot, your common garden snail, cooked in butter and flecked with herbs.

18 Sometimes, you just want a burger or a hometown pizza — not a filet, poached salmon or escargot, you know?

19 A baby’s first word might be escargot, in the case of my daughter Cecilia, who used to pick up snails from the sidewalk.

20 He loves to greet visitors to his home, so sit with him and have a glass of tsikoudia, the Greek moonshine, and enjoy it with kohli, Greek escargot.

escargot 同义词

2 食用蜗牛

edible snail

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