What is another word for escargots?

Pronunciation: [ɪskˈɑːɡə͡ʊs] (IPA)

When it comes to French cuisine, escargots or snails are a delicacy enjoyed by many. However, for those who are not a fan of the word "escargots", there are a few synonyms that can be used. One is "escargot de Bourgogne", which refers to the specific type of snail used in the classic French dish. Another synonym is "caracoles", which is the Spanish word for snails. In Italy, snails are called "lumache", while in Greece they are known as "χοχλιοί (chokhlioi)". Regardless of what you call them, snails can be enjoyed in a variety of dishes, from garlic butter to tomato sauces.

What are the hypernyms for Escargots?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Famous quotes with Escargots

  • By any precise definition, Washington is a city of advanced depravity. There one meets and dines with the truly great killers of the age, but only the quirkily fastidious are offended, for the killers are urbane and learned gentlemen who discuss their work with wit and charm and know which tool to use on the escargots. On New York's East Side one occasionally meets a person so palpably evil as to be fascinatingly irresistible. There is a smell of power and danger on these people, and one may be horrified, exhilarated, disgusted or mesmerized by the awful possibilities they suggest, but never simply depressed. Depression comes in the presence of depravity that makes no pretense about itself, a kind of depravity that says, "You and I, we are base, ugly, tasteless, cruel and beastly; let's admit it and have a good wallow." That is how Times Square speaks. And not only Times Square. Few cities in the country lack the same amenities. Pornography, prostitution, massage parlors, hard-core movies, narcotics dealers — all seem to be inescapable and permanent results of an enlightened view of liberty which has expanded the American's right to choose his own method of shaping a life. Granted such freedom, it was probably inevitable that many of us would yield to the worst instincts, and many do, and not only in New York. Most cities, however, are able to keep the evidence out of the center of town. Under a rock, as it were. In New York, a concatenation of economics, shifting real estate values and subway lines has worked to turn the rock over and put the show on display in the middle of town. What used to be called "The Crossroads of the World" is now a sprawling testament to the dreariness which liberty can produce when it permits people with no taste whatever to enjoy the same right to depravity as the elegant classes.
    Russell Baker

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