释义 |
Definition of macaroni in English: macaroninounPlural macaronies ˌmakəˈrəʊniˌmækəˈroʊni 1mass noun Pasta in the shape of narrow tubes. Example sentencesExamples - You can also use soy-based mayonnaise and light vinaigrette dressings in potato and macaroni salads and coleslaw.
- The current issue has recipes for monkey bread, macaroni and cheese and pulled pork, and several that use Jell-O.
- Drain the pasta or macaroni, then return it to the saucepan.
- For two people, you need about 6oz of macaroni (or you can use any similar-sized pasta).
- Combine cheese sauce with cooked macaroni; stirring over medium heat.
- Mom had really gone all out: chicken, green beans, mashed potatoes and gravy, macaroni and cheese, salad, and bread.
- If there's any food left over from supper, then I might fry that up - bits of macaroni or potato.
- I still carry around a hankering for bread and dripping, steamed pudding, and sweet macaroni, but I know they will do me no good, so I avoid them.
- He stood in line and got some fried chicken, mashed potatoes, gravy, coleslaw macaroni, baked beans, and a roll.
- Starch-based entrées such as macaroni and cheese and burritos are often the worst offenders, since by their nature they contain no vegetables at all.
- Sometimes for days or weeks in a row they serve the same food, like macaroni, corn dogs, small burgers, and cheese pizza.
- This means that it must have been dry pasta, professionally made, indicating in turn that macaroni was well established as a food.
- They are eating either macaroni and cheese or hamburgers and French fries, but they eat a lot of junk food and do not get adequate amounts of phosphorus.
- The pastas include lasagne, spaghetti, tagliatelle, macaroni, tortellini and capellini, so you're not going to get much more Italian than that!
- There's artichoke asparagus ravioli, linguini bolognese, macaroni and cheese, and asparagus risotto.
- I helped him with dinner: hamburger patties, macaroni and cheese.
- Good macaroni cheese needs pasta with big holes, such as traditional long macaroni or, failing that, rigatoni, that the creamy luscious sauce can seep into.
- This effectively ended all lunchtime reminiscences of macaroni and cheese.
- How did meat loaf and macaroni and cheese and green beans get to be Southern?
- A French table is likely to have on it a cauldron of vegetable soup, complete with carrots and chard and tiny pasta shapes such as macaroni.
2An 18th-century British dandy who imitated continental fashions. (18世纪效仿欧洲大陆时尚的)英国花花公子 Example sentencesExamples - I think this is manifested in some ways in the idea of the macaroni and, later, the dandy.
OriginLate 17th century: from Italian maccaroni (now usually spelled maccheroni), plural of maccarone, from late Greek makaria 'food made from barley'. When ‘Yankee Doodle went to town a-riding on a pony’ and ‘stuck a feather in his hat and called it macaroni’, he was not confusing his headgear with pasta. He was presenting himself as a dandy — completely unconvincingly, reflecting the English view of Americans, then still under British colonial rule, as lacking sophistication. In 18th-century Britain the macaronis were young men who had travelled abroad and exaggeratedly imitated continental fashions. The pasta dish pre-dated this trend. Its name also survives in macaroon (late 16th century), which came through French, changing its recipe on the way. Italian macaroni goes back to Greek makaria ‘food made from barley’.
Rhymesabalone, Albinoni, Annigoni, Antonioni, baloney, Bodoni, boloney, bony, calzone, cannelloni, canzone, cicerone, coney, conversazione, coronae, crony, Gaborone, Giorgione, Manzoni, Marconi, mascarpone, minestrone, Moroni, Mulroney, padrone, panettoni, pepperoni, phoney, polony, pony, rigatoni, Shoshone, Sloaney, stony, Toni, tony, zabaglione Definition of macaroni in US English: macaroninounˌmakəˈrōnēˌmækəˈroʊni 1A variety of pasta formed in narrow tubes. 通心面,通心粉 Example sentencesExamples - They are eating either macaroni and cheese or hamburgers and French fries, but they eat a lot of junk food and do not get adequate amounts of phosphorus.
- The current issue has recipes for monkey bread, macaroni and cheese and pulled pork, and several that use Jell-O.
- Good macaroni cheese needs pasta with big holes, such as traditional long macaroni or, failing that, rigatoni, that the creamy luscious sauce can seep into.
- Drain the pasta or macaroni, then return it to the saucepan.
- A French table is likely to have on it a cauldron of vegetable soup, complete with carrots and chard and tiny pasta shapes such as macaroni.
- I helped him with dinner: hamburger patties, macaroni and cheese.
- The pastas include lasagne, spaghetti, tagliatelle, macaroni, tortellini and capellini, so you're not going to get much more Italian than that!
- Combine cheese sauce with cooked macaroni; stirring over medium heat.
- Sometimes for days or weeks in a row they serve the same food, like macaroni, corn dogs, small burgers, and cheese pizza.
- He stood in line and got some fried chicken, mashed potatoes, gravy, coleslaw macaroni, baked beans, and a roll.
- How did meat loaf and macaroni and cheese and green beans get to be Southern?
- There's artichoke asparagus ravioli, linguini bolognese, macaroni and cheese, and asparagus risotto.
- I still carry around a hankering for bread and dripping, steamed pudding, and sweet macaroni, but I know they will do me no good, so I avoid them.
- For two people, you need about 6oz of macaroni (or you can use any similar-sized pasta).
- Starch-based entrées such as macaroni and cheese and burritos are often the worst offenders, since by their nature they contain no vegetables at all.
- If there's any food left over from supper, then I might fry that up - bits of macaroni or potato.
- You can also use soy-based mayonnaise and light vinaigrette dressings in potato and macaroni salads and coleslaw.
- This means that it must have been dry pasta, professionally made, indicating in turn that macaroni was well established as a food.
- This effectively ended all lunchtime reminiscences of macaroni and cheese.
- Mom had really gone all out: chicken, green beans, mashed potatoes and gravy, macaroni and cheese, salad, and bread.
2An 18th-century British dandy affecting Continental fashions. (18世纪效仿欧洲大陆时尚的)英国花花公子 Example sentencesExamples - I think this is manifested in some ways in the idea of the macaroni and, later, the dandy.
OriginLate 17th century: from Italian maccaroni (now usually spelled maccheroni), plural of maccarone, from late Greek makaria ‘food made from barley’. |