Grouchy smurf
Grouchy
there is a kind of apple called a crab apple
it smells like a pickle
Shakespeare does not use those exact words, but here are some similar uses. Thou shalt be whipp'd with wire, and stew'd in brine, Smarting in lingering pickle. (Antony and Cleopatra, II, 5) How camest thou in this pickle? (The Tempest, V, 1) I have been in such a pickle since I saw you last that, I fear me, will never out of my bones (The Tempest, V, 1) In the quotation from Antony and Cleopatra, the "pickle" is the same as "brine", salty water which aids preservation of vegetables etc. In the quotations from The Tempest, the idea is that Trinculo is "pickled", which is to say, drunk. The same implication is given in Twelfth Night, when Sir Toby says "A plague o' these pickled herring." The idea is that it is Sir Toby and not the herring that is pickled. Shakespeare does not use the phrase in the sense of being in trouble or a tricky situation.
The entire cucumber is made into a pickle.
No, but you can cucumber a pickle
A pickle is a cucumber. It has been "pickled" or soaked in vinegar and other spices.
Essiggurke (marinated cucumber)
A pickle is a marinated cucumber. To be in a pickle is to be in a jam, in a problem situation.
Its a cucumber -_-
a pickle
The pickle
A pickle is a cucumber that has been cooked in vinegar. It is not salted, and once it cools down, it is packaged in a jar.
Pickle, as in vegetable, is pepino. Pickle as "in trouble" or "in a jam" is estar en aprietos.pickle = pepino (also means cucumber) or pepinio
NO. A pickle is a pickled cucumber. :P so yeah. they are! Though technically anything that has been pickled (soaked in a brine or vinegar solution for long keeping) is a called a pickled. but in layman's terms a pickle is a cucumber.
a pickle