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cajun

/key-juhn/US // ˈkeɪ dʒən //UK // (ˈkeɪdʒən) //

卡琼,卡洪,卡洪人,卡吉恩

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a member of a group of people with an enduring cultural tradition whose French Catholic ancestors established permanent communities in Louisiana and Maine after being expelled from Acadia in the late 18th century.
    • : the French dialect of the Cajuns.
adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : of, relating to, or characteristic of Cajuns, especially those of Louisiana: Cajun cooking.

Examples

  • Bourbon Street at night is full of tourist mayhem and excess, and yet even there you can stumble into a bar and find Cajun music, which I love, being played by the most authentic artists in the genre.

  • There’s restaurants all over the place, but they have very little to do with the kind of food you have in Cajun country.

  • Martin would emerge from the kitchen to regale her audience with tales of a Cajun upbringing, detailing the history of the very dishes they ate.

  • Take James Carville, who, swigging Coc' Cola and playing the mad Cajun, spurred buttermilk-biscuit glamour to new heights.

  • So, the Southside Smokehouse is more than a barbecue pit, a burger shack, or a Cajun kitchen.

  • He was the son of a Cajun planter and had lived in the district he represented for most of his life.

  • Rub pork loin with paprika, Cajun seasoning, parsley, onion powder, garlic powder, sugar, salt, and pepper.

  • There the lingua franca is Cajun French, and folks love to fiddle, dance and most of all, eat.

  • Seventh, Cajun or Cajum, probably Fourcroya cubensis; leaves small, from four to five inches long.