cornichon

English

Etymology

Borrowed from French cornichon.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /kɔɹ.nɪ.ʃɔn/
  • Audio (US):(file)

Noun

cornichon (plural cornichons)

  1. A dill-pickled gherkin cucumber.
    • 1988 May 27, Sondra Rosenberg, “Restaurant Tours: a bargain verging on a steal”, in Chicago Reader[1]:
      Garnished with excellent Dijon-style mustard, horseradish, cornichons, sprinkled with diced gelee, it was close to perfection as one is likely to get on a dinner plate.
    • 2022 August 11, Ann Taylor Pittman, “Southern Pickletini”, in Southern Living[2], archived from the original on 21 April 2024:
      Move over, dirty martini. The pickletini—with our clever Southern spin—is a tangier, more savory, arguably tastier cocktail. We love our pickled okra riff, but if okra isn't your thing, you can simply sub dill pickles (or cornichons). Dry vermouth adds a hint of herbal backbone, but you can omit it if you don't have it on hand. Despite 007's classic order, a traditional martini should be stirred, not shaken, so that it has a weightier mouthfeel (shaking aerates it) and is a bit less diluted.
  2. A French-style pickled miniature cucumber.

Anagrams

French

Etymology

From corne +‎ -iche +‎ -on.

Pronunciation

Noun

cornichon m (plural cornichons)

  1. gherkin
  2. pickle (pickled cucumber)
  3. (slang) nitwit, dummy

Descendants

  • English: cornichon
  • Russian: корнишон (kornišon)
  • Turkish: kornişon

Further reading

Norman

Etymology

Borrowed from French cornichon.

Noun

cornichon m (plural cornichons)

  1. (Jersey) gherkin