Turkish bread
English
editPronunciation
editAudio (General Australian): (file)
Noun
editTurkish bread (usually uncountable, plural Turkish breads)
- (Australia) A broad, round and flat bread made from wheat, sometimes considered a type of pita; pide.
- 2008, Charles Rawlings-Way, Meg Worby, Gabi Mocatta, Tasmania, 5th edition, Lonely Planet, page 43:
- They devour sandwiches for lunch, with most sandwich fillings in cafés now coming on grilled, fancy-pants Italian bread such as focaccia, on bagels, or on Turkish bread (also known as pide).
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see Turkish, bread.
- 2008, Joseph J. Conte, Time to Say Goodbye[1], page 151:
- The Turkish breads are cornbread, Pide (a broad, round, and flat bread made of wheat), Lavash, Tandır bread (baked on the inner walls of a round oven called tandır), Bazlama, and Simit (also known as “gevrek”), another type of ring-shaped bread covered with sesame seeds.
Synonyms
edit- (broad, round and flat bread made from wheat): pide