[
US
/ˈdʒɛnəviz/
]
ADJECTIVE
-
of or relating to or characteristic of Genoa or its inhabitants
the Genoese sailor we call Columbus
How To Use Genovese In A Sentence
- Pesto genovese is not included, although there is a “Ground Basil Sauce Piemontese” Salsa di basilico pestato. Delizia!
- Regardless, my eye went quickly past the Trebbianos, Vermentinos and Pinot Grigios until I reached something called Bianchetta Genovese.
- Organised crime is all around, even if it's no longer at the scale when Richie ‘the Boot’ Boiardo - a capo or captain for the famed Genovese family - lived out in Livingston.
- P. A. Uslengo, “Pesto genovese,” personal communication from Pietro Attilio Uslengo, Cancelliere della Confraternita del Pesto. Delizia!
- Gismondi, Nuovo vocabolario genovese-italiano con rilievi sulla ortografia, pronuncia e qualche particolarità grammaticale, Genova, 1955. Delizia!
- Yet many contemporary dishes, from pesto genovese to spaghetti alle vongole with clams, would be unthinkable without it. Delizia!
- The Genovese family's decision to use Rea - then still a wannabe Bonanno wiseguy - as one of the two gunmen is perhaps the most unusual aspect of the hit. Jerry Capeci: Bonanno Family Wiseguy Nabbed in 30-Year-Old Mob Rubout
- Now all of the gods from and pinesap are fledgeless composedly and low on the athene genovese to celsius faintly that a sylvan prosecution. Rational Review
- It is no coincidence that so many Italian products and dishes are named after cities: bistecca alla fiorentina, prosciutto di Parma, saltimbocca alla romana, pizza napoletana, risotto alla milanese, pesto genovese, pesto trapanese, olive ascolane, mostarda di Cremona… From early in the second millennium, the hundred cities of Italy hogged the produce of the countryside and used it to build a rich food culture. Delizia!
- Pesto alla genovese means something different now. Delizia!