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margarita

/mahr-guh-ree-tuh/US // ˌmɑr gəˈri tə //UK // (ˌmɑːɡəˈriːtə) //

玛格丽特,玛格丽塔,玛格丽特酒,马格丽特

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : Sometimes Mar·ga·ri·ta . a cocktail made of tequila, lime or lemon juice, and an orange-flavored liqueur, usually served in a salt-rimmed glass.

Examples

  • Bring food from any restaurant at the Wharf, but adult beverages, including beers and margaritas, must be purchased from Cantina Bambina’s outdoor bars.

  • A request for a margarita, “up, no salt,” was followed by tequila and lime on ice and a glass with a salted rim.

  • That’s a great place to stop for fish tacos and a margarita.

  • On a sunny afternoon, I made margaritas while we feasted on smoked-chicken sliders.

  • Use the 64-ounce container to whip up large batches of margaritas or soup.

  • Of course, Kim Jong-Un takes an image hit as a Katy Perry-obsessed, margarita-drinking maniac with daddy issues.

  • Reading the expression on my face that must have conveyed something like “surely I can get a margarita at this place?”

  • “That was quintessential Breitbart,” Irby said, sipping on a “Wave,” a frozen margarita swirled with sangria.

  • “Our margarita machine was saved, miraculously,” Delamarter said.

  • The pineapple margarita, well, I prefer my tequila resposado and on the rocks.

  • Infuriated by his failure, the little monster butchered the royal officers of Margarita.

  • Seventeen days later they sighted the island of Margarita, where there was a Spanish post.

  • On the eel-grass are to be found Lacuna vincta and the delicate iridescent little shells of Margarita helicina.

  • The names of some of the inmates on this date are Ruth, Elsie, and Margarita.

  • For a long time Margarita was attached to Cumana, but in the eighteenth century it was made administratively independent.