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hibachi

[ US /həˈbɑtʃi, hiˈbɑtʃi/ ]
NOUN
  1. a portable brazier that burns charcoal and has a grill for cooking
VERB
  1. cook over a hibachi grill

How To Use hibachi In A Sentence

  • Midway between Kunsan and Osan, we tried to stay clean during a mud festival on a beach, where we also cooked snails and colorful clams over a hibachi and ate them for lunch.
  • Never use a hibachi or barbecue grill inside a home, vehicle, or garage.
  • The different components of this strange dish are bathed in thick, syrupy sauces, so when you put them on the hibachi, the air over the table fills with the sugary smell of burnt marshmallows.
  • For me a hibachi will always be a small cast iron charcoal barbecue. A meta-mystery : Bev Vincent
  • As Niigata moved slowly around the sunken hibachi hearth, Nicholas said, `You have been to Floating City and yet you're here now. FLOATING CITY
  • Afterward Bob takes Charlotte to lunch at a restaurant whose menu of raw fish is so unappetizing as to make him wish for his own hibachi.
  • ` ` He really was screaming it this morning in the shootaround, so 'hibachi' it is. USATODAY.com - Basketball - Charlotte vs. Washington
  • Beside the hibachi was a sheet of newspaper with a neat arrangement of little piles of unidentifiable flotsam on it. Burning Water
  • The griddle-tossed meats and vegetables typical of hibachi cooking can all end up tasting pretty much the same.
  • The "hibachi" is the only stove, except the cook-stove, that they have in Japanese houses. The Japanese Twins
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