释义 |
kishke|ˈkɪʃkə| Also kishka, kishkeh, kishker. [Yiddish.] a. Beef intestine casing stuffed with a sausage-like savoury filling. b. In sing. and pl. The guts. slang.
1936Mencken Amer. Lang. (ed. 4) 217 In New York City the high density of Eastern Jews in the population has made almost every New Yorker familiar with a long list of Yiddish words e.g.,..kishkes, kittl, [etc.]. 1951L. W. Leonard Jewish Cookery xiv. 190 Stuffed kishke may be roasted with chicken, duck, goose or turkey. 1959B. Kops Hamlet of Stepney Green i. 12 You sweat your kishkers out to give them a good education. 1964Amer. N. & Q. Jan. 72/1 Ishka, pishka, Hit him in the kishka. 1967G. Sims Last Best Friend vi. 53 They had..dined at Bloom's in Whitechapel High Street on beetroot bortsch and stuffed kishka. 1968Guardian 8 Oct. 2/6 It is not every city where you go into a café and find yourself offered ‘knishes, blintzes, kishka, [etc.]’. 1968L. Rosten Joys of Yiddish 181, I laughed until my kishkas were sore. 1970L. M. Feinsilver Taste of Yiddish iii. 293 Gentiles are learning to enjoy and pronounce such typical dishes as kishke and tsimmes. 1972Listener 16 Mar. 341/3 Kishkeh vaguely resembles a kosher haggis..stuffed with a mixture of flour meal, grated onion and fat. |