Anti vs Manti - What's the difference?
anti | manti |
(rare) A word used before a noun or noun phrase to indicate opposition to the concept expressed by the noun or noun phrase. (rfex)
A type of dumpling served in Turkish and Central Asian cuisine
* {{quote-news, year=1998, date=November 13, author=Ted Shen, title=Restaurant Tours: Metin Kurtulus serves Turkey, work=Chicago Reader
, passage=And they kept one of the national dishes, manti (pasta stuffed with ground beef served in garlic-yogurt sauce, $11.50), as well as lahmacun, sort of a Turkish pizza ($3), and arnavut cigeri (fried calf's liver and potatoes, $5.75), a hot appetizer. }}
* {{quote-news, year=2007, date=December 5, author=Melissa Clark, title=When It Looks at You, It’s Done, work=New York Times
, passage=Crowding the table were miniature, hand-formed lamb dumplings called manti ; flaky pastries, called boreks, filled with wild greens; and an elaborate paste of chicken, wheat and pistachios called keskek. }}
As proper nouns the difference between anti and manti
is that anti is while manti is one of the four nephite spies in the book of mormon.anti
English
(wikipedia anti)Coordinate terms
* (chemistry) synAntonyms
* proPreposition
(English prepositions)See also
* anti-Anagrams
* ----manti
English
Noun
(en-noun)citation
citation