knish


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  • noun

Words related to knish

(Yiddish) a baked or fried turnover filled with potato or meat or cheese

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Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
Not only is the work of Knish and Morgan valuable poetry in its own right, but the Spectrist project also sheds light on contemporary perceptions of Imagism and Vorticism, movements now seen as canonical in early modernism but whose principles and stances were not initially uncontested.
Mennen's knishes epitomize the Jewish-food scene in Atlantasteeped in tradition but constantly innovating.
On the streets of New York, the knish is a piping hot square of fried mashed potatoes served with a ribbon of mustard.
What in Jewish cuisine is a knish? Brian May - see Question 6 from which long-running radio comedy?
Fellow rounder Knish (Turturro) offers to bankroll Mike, after watching his utter defeat at the table; depressed, Mike instead takes a part-time job driving a delivery truck for Knish to make ends meet.
"All I do is Knish off the work the other guys produce," Hunt says.
A complimentary cut and knish at Francesco Group in Chester.
Camera (color, DV), Matthias Gransky, Benjamin Kasulke; editor, Swanberg', sound, Kevin Bewersdorf, Jay Duplass, Aaron Katz, knish Savjani, Dia Sokol.
(41) Implicit in this performance is the use of the word knish in Yiddish as slang for vagina.
dined sparingly because he believed that God existed in everything, and it's intimidating to wolf down a knish if you think you're ladling mustard onto the First Cause of All Things."
A residential development site in the heart of the Hasidic section of Williamburg, Brooklyn, which housed Gabila's Knish Factory since 1921 was also sold by Massey Knakal in an all-cash transaction valued at $6,850,000.
One New York pizzeria offers "spaguetti" and the sign on a lunch cart lists an Eastern European potato pie as a "kanish" instead of a knish. Even when stores change hands and signs are repainted, some messages linger.
The other day I did see Cardinal O'Connor buying a knish in front of the Plaza Hotel, but that didn't change my life.
If I were a food, I'd be a knish, even though on the outside, I look