An honor or award gained for excellence.
1Now they're off on cordon bleu cookery courses or environmental awareness training.
2He ought to have said ' cordon bleu,' for I've never eaten a better dinner!
3Most captains take cordon bleu food, or works of antique art, fancy fabrics, stuff like that.
4After all, one does not go to Burger King expecting a cordon bleu repast with fine wine.
5A cordon bleu passed under the window.
6These skills included cordon bleu cooking, marksmanship, a customized blend of martial arts, emergency medicine and information technology.
7And so in fact it was, and Puysieux received the cordon bleu on the day the King had named.
8To despise money, is to despise happiness, liberty, in short, enjoyments of every kind. A cordon bleu passed under the window.
9From what I've seen of the past three months' ordering slips, we should remove the chicken cordon bleu, meatloaf, and broiled flounder.
10He rose high in the French army, and had the cordon bleu: his sister was second wife of the first Duke of Berwick.
11At an early date in the cordon bleu Russian Tea Room on 57th Street, he ordered his student standby meal, a tuna sandwich.
12It was back in the early Eighties and Gaynor, a long-time bank official, had taken a sabbatical to pursue a cordon bleu cookery course.
13The cordon bleu and the cordon rouge are in the like position, and abbeys are still more constantly subject to the régime of influence.
14He had always the cordon bleu outside, except at fetes, when he wore it inside, with eight or ten millions of precious stones attached.
15And I know she went to the Cordon Bleu school in Paris.
16Then Rosette spoke for the first time since the Cordon Bleu ball.
Translations for cordon bleu