释义 |
Definition of jambalaya in English: jambalayanoun ˌdʒambəˈlʌɪəˌjambəˈlīə mass nounA Cajun dish of rice with shrimps, chicken, and vegetables. (卡津人食品)什锦杂烩饭(用大米与虾、鸡肉和蔬菜烹制而成) huge concoctions of gumbo and jambalaya count noun Creole jambalayas are among my favourites Example sentencesExamples - Every year my dad makes jambalaya, a mix of rice, chicken, spices, red and green peppers, ham, and sausage.
- In a traditional jambalaya, chicken, sausage, ham, and chopped vegetables are cooked and added with seasonings and liquid to an iron pot full of rice.
- IF YOU like paella, you will like jambalaya, its distant cousin from southern Louisiana.
- Now, instead of serving pita pockets or turkey sandwiches at lunch, the students are treated to roast beef with caramelized onions on a baguette or shrimp jambalaya with jalapeño cornbread.
- Last year I was in New Orleans and had plenty of gumbo, jambalaya, and crawfish étouffée.
OriginLouisiana French, from Provençal jambalaia. Rhymesacquire, admire, afire, applier, aspire, attire, ayah, backfire, barbwire, bemire, briar, buyer, byre, choir, conspire, crier, cryer, defier, denier, desire, dire, drier, dryer, dyer, enquire, entire, esquire, expire, fire, flyer, friar, fryer, Gaia, gyre, hellfire, hire, hiya, ire, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Josiah, Kintyre, latria, liar, lyre, Maia, Maya, Mayer, messiah, mire, misfire, Nehemiah, Obadiah, papaya, pariah, peripeteia, perspire, playa, Praia, prior, pyre, quire, replier, scryer, shire, shyer, sire, skyer, Sophia, spire, squire, supplier, Surabaya, suspire, tier, tire, transpire, trier, tumble-dryer, tyre, Uriah, via, wire, Zechariah, Zedekiah, Zephaniah Definition of jambalaya in US English: jambalayanounˌjambəˈlīə A Cajun dish of rice with shrimp, chicken, and vegetables. (卡津人食品)什锦杂烩饭(用大米与虾、鸡肉和蔬菜烹制而成) huge concoctions of gumbo and jambalaya count noun Creole jambalayas are among my favorites Example sentencesExamples - Every year my dad makes jambalaya, a mix of rice, chicken, spices, red and green peppers, ham, and sausage.
- IF YOU like paella, you will like jambalaya, its distant cousin from southern Louisiana.
- Last year I was in New Orleans and had plenty of gumbo, jambalaya, and crawfish étouffée.
- In a traditional jambalaya, chicken, sausage, ham, and chopped vegetables are cooked and added with seasonings and liquid to an iron pot full of rice.
- Now, instead of serving pita pockets or turkey sandwiches at lunch, the students are treated to roast beef with caramelized onions on a baguette or shrimp jambalaya with jalapeño cornbread.
OriginLouisiana French, from Provençal jambalaia. |