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barbecue
[ bahr-bi-kyoo ]
noun
- pieces of meat, fowl, fish, or the like, roasted or smoked over fire, especially when basted in a barbecue sauce:
The restaurant serves amazing barbecue.
- a framework, such as a grill or a spit, for cooking meat or vegetables over an open fire:
Make sure you clean off the barbecue so it's ready to use when we go camping.
- a meal, usually in the open air and often as a social gathering, at which meats are roasted on a grill or over an open hearth or pit.
- any social gathering centered around food, especially meat, that is cooked over fire using a grill, spit, smoker, or the like:
Our weekend barbecue was lively until it started to rain.
- a dressed steer, lamb, or other animal, roasted whole.
verb (used with object)
- to broil, smoke, or roast (meat, fowl, fish, or the like) whole or in large pieces over an open fire, using a spit, grill, smoker, or the like, often seasoning with vinegar, spices, salt, and pepper:
They barbecued a chicken and some steaks for dinner.
- to cook (sliced or diced meat, fowl, fish, or the like) in a highly seasoned sauce.
verb (used without object)
- to cook over an open fire using an instrument such as a grill, spit, or smoker, or to host a social gathering where food is cooked in this manner:
If the weather's nice, we'll barbecue in the backyard.
barbecue
/ ˈ²úɑ˲úɪˌ°ìÂá³ÜË /
noun
- a meal cooked out of doors over an open fire
- an outdoor party or picnic at which barbecued food is served
- a grill or fireplace used in barbecuing
- the food so cooked
verb
- to cook (meat, fish, etc) on a grill, usually over charcoal and often with a highly seasoned sauce
- to cook (meat, fish, etc) in a highly seasoned sauce
Other ˜yÐÄvlog Forms
- ²ú²¹°ù·²ú±ð·³¦³Ü·±ð°ù noun
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of barbecue1
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of barbecue1
Example Sentences
Keep barbecues with propane tanks in this zone.
We went back and forth, but it was hilarious because as I was recording in my basement, I was supposed to be barbecuing for a bunch of friends I was hosting.
The mix of scents and sounds — birdsongs commingled with freeway traffic and music, the smell of wild sage and wafting barbecue smoke — all feel uniquely L.A. to me.
Charlotte, I wonder if you could talk about the story of that day at the barbecue.
The guys from Redondo Beach Fire Department, Engine 62, have stopped by more than once, and Foster treated them to a barbecue dinner.
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