different between tarragon vs estragole
tarragon
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Middle French targon (cf. modern estragon), from Medieval Latin tragonia, from Arabic ????????? (?ar??n), ultimately from Ancient Greek ?????????? (drakóntion, “dragonwort, Dracunculus vulgaris”), from ?????? (drák?n, “dragon, serpent”).
Pronunciation
- (General American, Mary–marry–merry distinction) IPA(key): /?tæ????n/, /?tæ????n/
- (General American, Mary–marry–merry merger) IPA(key): /?t?????n/, /?t?????n/
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?tæ????n/
- Hyphenation: tar?ra?gon
Noun
tarragon (usually uncountable, plural tarragons)
- A perennial herb, the wormwood species Artemisia dracunculus, from Europe and parts of Asia.
- The leaves of this plant (either fresh, or preserved in vinegar / oil mixture) used as a seasoning.
Synonyms
- estragon, dragon's wort, French tarragon, Russian tarragon, silky wormwood, wild tarragon
Translations
References
- tarragon at OneLook Dictionary Search
Anagrams
- arrogant
tarragon From the web:
- what tarragon taste like
- what tarragon good for
- what tarragon meaning in arabic
- what tarragon look like
- what tarragon is used for
- what's tarragon sauce
- what's tarragon vinegar
- what tarragon in spanish
estragole
English
Etymology
From French estragon (“tarragon”) + -ole.
Noun
estragole (uncountable)
- (organic chemistry) The methyl ether of chavicol; it occurs in the essential oil of tarragon
Anagrams
- alter egos, alter-egos
estragole From the web:
- what is estragole used for
- what does estragole mean
- what does estragole
- what foods contain estragole
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- tarragon vs estragole
- frenchtarragon vs tarragon
- estragon vs tarragon
- seasoning vs tarragon
- mixture vs tarragon
- appetizer vs canape
- canape vs crostini
- canape vs couch
- savory vs canape
- savoury vs canape
- canape vs comedy
- canoe vs canape
- canale vs canape
- marquise vs canape
- starter vs relish
- starter vs aperitif
- starter vs entry
- fledgling vs starter
- cranking vs starter
- scratch vs starter