[
US
/ˈbɝɡəndi/
]
[ UK /bˈɜːɡʌndi/ ]
[ UK /bˈɜːɡʌndi/ ]
NOUN
- a former province of eastern France that is famous for its wines
- red table wine from the Burgundy region of France (or any similar wine made elsewhere)
How To Use Burgundy In A Sentence
- In his dreams she wore a blue satin frock with a burgundy shawl, or a pink silk pelisse, or a white crinoline.
- It is entirely possible to drink any wine with any dish, and anyone who says otherwise is talking bunkum; a respected gastro-bore friend of mine likes to drink white burgundy with stewed lamb, as he finds it brings out the texture of the meat.
- The glass pavilion, designed by Dirk van Pastel, is in the western corner of a triangular site, surrounded by the woods and fields of Burgundy.
- The wine will age, our anger with France will pass, and we'll buy that Burgundy in a few years.
- Furniture includes chairs and couches upholstered in amber, magenta, and burgundy.
- Deep burgundy and maroon remain the height of floral chic. Times, Sunday Times
- There was a rocking chair that sat next to a fireplace, which held a medium sized cooking cauldron that was spilling ashes onto the burgundy hearthrug.
- The couple began hosting Burgundy symposia for passionate amateurs in 1997, welcoming a dozen guests to Bouilland for an intensive week of tasting and touring, enlisting such experts as Clive Coates and Alan Meadows to assist. In the Domain of the Earth Mother of Burgundy
- He was blandly dressed in a white shirt and burgundy tie.
- Italian restaurants restricted their list to Italian wines; French restaurant wine lists were a recital of Bordeaux, Burgundy, and Champagne.