释义 |
Definition of wurst in English: wurstnoun vəːstvʊəstwərst mass nounGerman or Austrian sausage. (德国或奥地利式的)香肠 Example sentencesExamples - Truth be told, excellent German chefs run superb restaurant kitchens all over the world; nevertheless, think German food, and you think sauerkraut and wurst and schnitzel the size of a catcher's mitt.
- Pork is the most commonly consumed meat, though various sorts of wurst, or sausage, are often eaten in lieu of meat.
- One of my favorite things to do in summer is cook juicy red meat and various wursts over an open flame.
- With an extensive range of options - from carpaccio to crispy chicken fingers and from Bavarian wurst to a selection of French cheeses - the menu was truly international.
- But for all the culture of beer, fish and chips, beer, wurst, beer and steak frites, local communities still exist, often hidden by the mushroom growth of tacky hotels, bars, restaurants and apartment blocks.
- German dishes such as sauerkraut, wursts, wiener schnitzel with spatzle, herring and herring salad, cottage cheese, hot soups and hot potato salad, stollen, and my favorite, apple strudel were also served.
- Joe didn't quite get filled up with wursts, so he topped himself off at the end of the night with a slice.
- A range of soft, fragrant sausages or wurst can be found in Austria and Bavaria.
- I have no appetite problem at all, in fact, I eat more than usual, any fat and sugar laden bakery is my favorite here, not to mention their curry wurst (curry sausage).
- In Germany, there is always the main staple of the country's beer and wine festivals, the wurst.
- No doubt, the happiest of all will be Sofians and visitors to the capital - those who will drink free Dutch beer, eat German wurst and Belgian chocolate.
- The cafes at either end of the street are sparsely populated, and the aproned man grilling wurst for the restaurant looks bored, lonely and cold, wisps of smoke wreathing lazily about his head.
Rhymesaccursed, burst, curst, erst, first, headfirst, Hurst, thirst, under-rehearsed, unrehearsed, unversed, verst, worst Definition of wurst in US English: wurstnounwərst German or Austrian sausage. (德国或奥地利式的)香肠 Example sentencesExamples - One of my favorite things to do in summer is cook juicy red meat and various wursts over an open flame.
- No doubt, the happiest of all will be Sofians and visitors to the capital - those who will drink free Dutch beer, eat German wurst and Belgian chocolate.
- With an extensive range of options - from carpaccio to crispy chicken fingers and from Bavarian wurst to a selection of French cheeses - the menu was truly international.
- The cafes at either end of the street are sparsely populated, and the aproned man grilling wurst for the restaurant looks bored, lonely and cold, wisps of smoke wreathing lazily about his head.
- I have no appetite problem at all, in fact, I eat more than usual, any fat and sugar laden bakery is my favorite here, not to mention their curry wurst (curry sausage).
- In Germany, there is always the main staple of the country's beer and wine festivals, the wurst.
- German dishes such as sauerkraut, wursts, wiener schnitzel with spatzle, herring and herring salad, cottage cheese, hot soups and hot potato salad, stollen, and my favorite, apple strudel were also served.
- Joe didn't quite get filled up with wursts, so he topped himself off at the end of the night with a slice.
- Truth be told, excellent German chefs run superb restaurant kitchens all over the world; nevertheless, think German food, and you think sauerkraut and wurst and schnitzel the size of a catcher's mitt.
- Pork is the most commonly consumed meat, though various sorts of wurst, or sausage, are often eaten in lieu of meat.
- A range of soft, fragrant sausages or wurst can be found in Austria and Bavaria.
- But for all the culture of beer, fish and chips, beer, wurst, beer and steak frites, local communities still exist, often hidden by the mushroom growth of tacky hotels, bars, restaurants and apartment blocks.
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