Vegetable vs Bourride - What's the difference?
vegetable | bourride |
Any plant.
A plant raised for some edible part of it, such as the leaves, roots, fruit or flowers, but excluding any plant considered to be a fruit, grain, or spice in the culinary sense.
The edible part of such a plant.
(figuratively, derogatory) A person whose brain (or, infrequently, body) has been damaged so that they cannot interact with the surrounding environment; a brain-dead person.
Of or relating to plants.
Of or relating to vegetables.
A dish made with monkfish, mayonnaise, and a vegetable brunoise.
* {{quote-news, year=2009, date=March 4, author=Florence Fabricant, title=Scallop Bourride, work=New York Times
, passage=Place 2 baguette toast slices in each of 4 soup plates, spoon in bourride and top with another slice of toast and minced fennel fronds.}}
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As nouns the difference between vegetable and bourride
is that vegetable is any plant while bourride is a dish made with monkfish, mayonnaise, and a vegetable brunoise.As an adjective vegetable
is of or relating to plants.vegetable
English
Noun
(en noun)Synonyms
* (derogatory term for a person with brain damage) cabbageAdjective
(-)bourride
English
Noun
(en noun)citation
