Gluttony vs Gourmandise - What's the difference?
gluttony | gourmandise |
The vice of eating to excess.
* {{quote-book, year=1922, author=(Ben Travers)
, chapter=5, title= To eat food in a gluttonous manner; to gorge; to make a pig of oneself.
* 1843 , (Thomas Carlyle), '', book 3, ch. IV, ''Happy
* 2000 , Frank McLynn, Villa and Zapata: A Biography of the Mexican Revolution , Pimlico (2001), ISBN 9780712666770,
* 2008 , Neville Phillips, The Stage Struck Me! , Matador (2008), ISBN 9781906510435,
gluttony
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As nouns the difference between gluttony and gourmandise
is that gluttony is the vice of eating to excess while gourmandise is gluttony.As a verb gourmandise is
to eat food in a gluttonous manner; to gorge; to make a pig of oneself.gluttony
English
Noun
(-)A Cuckoo in the Nest, passage=The most rapid and most seductive transition in all human nature is that which attends the palliation of a ravenous appetite.
See also
* alimentivenessgourmandise
English
Etymology 1
Alternative forms
* gormandise * gourmandize * gormandizeVerb
(gourmandis)- A benevolent old Surgeon sat once in our company, with a Patient fallen sick by gourmandising , whom he had just, too briefly in the Patient’s judgment, been examining.
page 2:
- Even as the envoys from Europe, Japan, Latin America and the United States gourmandised their way through the eight savoury courses served on silver plates and the two dessert courses brought in on plates of solid gold, their ears were bombarded by the multiple counterpoint and polyphony of sixteen bands in Mexico City's main square or Zócalo below.
page 146:
- but there was no cream, no butter, no foie gras, no soufflés, no beef fillet steaks, no rich sauces or runny cheeses such as I had been gourmandising on for a whole week – not to mention the many bottles of champagne, wine and brandy.