English
Etymology
After Jean Naigeon of Dijon, France, who originated it in 1856.
Noun
Dijon mustard (countable and uncountable, plural Dijon mustards)
- A kind of mustard made with verjuice (or, more recently, white wine) instead of vinegar.
Translations
kind of mustard
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 法式黃芥末醬 / 法式黄芥末酱 (fàshì huáng jièmòjiàng)
- Czech: Dijonská hořčice
- Danish: dijonsennep
- Dutch: mosterd van Dijon
- Esperanto: diĵona mustardo
- Finnish: Dijon-sinappi
- French: moutarde de Dijon (fr)
- German: Dijon-Senf
- Hebrew: חַרְדָּל דִיז׳וֹן (khardál dizhón)
- Italian: senape di Digione
- Japanese: ディジョンマスタード
- Korean: 디종 머스터드 (dijong meoseuteodeu)
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: Dijonsennep
- Persian: خردل دیژون
- Polish: Musztarda Dijon
- Portuguese: Mostarda Dijon
- Russian: Дижонская горчица (Dižonskaja gorčica)
- Serbo-Croatian: senf Dijon
- Spanish: Mostaza de Dijon
- Swedish: dijonsenap c
- Thai: มัสตาร์ดดีฌง
- Turkish: Dijon hardalı
- Ukrainian: Діжонська гірчиця (Dižonsʹka hirčycja)
- Yiddish: דיזשאָנער זענעפֿט (dizhoner zeneft)
|