Skip to main content

sherry

/sher-ee/US // ˈʃɛr i //UK // (ˈʃɛrɪ) //

雪利酒,雪莉,雪利,雪里

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1

    plural sher·ries.

    • : a fortified, amber-colored wine of southern Spain or any of various similar wines made elsewhere.

Examples

  • Add a ripe tomato that’s been diced, 1 teaspoon of rice wine or dry sherry and sprinkle on a pinch of sugar and stir-fry 1 minute.

  • Sherry booked one of the two weekend openings Wright had left, a Sunday six weeks away.

  • Sherry knew the school wasn’t planning a prom this year, the second miss in a row.

  • Their Elements series includes whiskies aged in red wine barrels and sherry barrels specially prepared to be kosher.

  • The fund has raised more than $20,000, but Sherry told the Blade it soon became clear the lack of housing in New Orleans was a long-term problem.

  • Well, the sherry allows more flavor to come out of the wood than could otherwise be extracted.

  • The next thing I remember was waking up in his bed back at the Sherry, naked.

  • Sherry is a wine of many styles and narratives, and Angelou appreciated challenge.

  • Closing his interview with Angelou, Plimpton wondered how sherry influenced her rituals after finishing a project.

  • What makes it so good, and where should the sherry virgin begin?

  • Tincture of guaiac, diluted to a light sherry-wine color (keep in a dark-glass bottle).

  • They lunched astonishingly well at Sherry's and drove afterwards in the Central Park.

  • But Webber shoved him roughly on into a clump of squat trees that were the color of sherry wine, with flat thick leaves.

  • Sherry we banished, and Marsala and liqueurs, and there was always good home-made lemonade available.

  • The orphan was so angry at this that, unheeding what he was doing, he drank off nearly a tumblerful of strong sherry at once.