Gelati vs Gelato - What's the difference?
gelati | gelato |
(Australia, countable, uncountable) Italian-style ice-cream; a serving of gelati, often in a cone.
* 1988 , (editor), Fictions 88 , ABC Enterprises for the Australian Broadcast Corp.,
* 1993 , , Westerly , Volumes 38-39,
* 2008 , Catherine McKinnon, The Nearly Happy Family ,
An Italian variant of ice cream made from milk and sugar, combined with other flavourings. The ingredients are super-cooled while stirring to break up ice crystals as they form.
As nouns the difference between gelati and gelato
is that gelati is italian-style ice-cream; a serving of gelati, often in a cone while gelato is an Italian variant of ice cream made from milk and sugar, combined with other flavourings. The ingredients are super-cooled while stirring to break up ice crystals as they form.gelati
English
Noun
(en-noun)page 64,
- Out in Fitzroy Street, the Saturday afternoon crowds strolled the wide footpaths, licking gelati .
page 37,
- Gelati'. '''Gelati'''. Limone, Strawberry, Chocolaty! shouts the ' Gelati man from the south of his face.
unnumbered page,
- ‘Would you kids like some gelati?’ Lucia asked.At home we usually had Peter?s Rainbow, but we?d had gelati' heaps of times at Flash, the ' gelati shop in Hindley Street.