Sinònims
Examples for "rosé"
Examples for "rosé"
1Few things are more evocative of summer than a glass of rosé.
2The wine is good local red and rosé and included in the price.
3We ask to try rosé wines, which Provence does really well.
4This same year the co-operative moved on to producing rosé wine.
5Didn't you used to like rosé? He pops open a can of beer.
1Spain has a long tradition of making rosado, and today makes some very good wines.
2Hernandez was one of three people convicted in the attack on Rosado.
3Gabriel Rosado hasn't won in four bouts since quitting in the seventh against the champion.
4She said she did not know which man had killed Rosado, the attorney general's office said.
5These days, Navarra also makes some really good red and white wines, but is still best-known for rosados.
1Here it is cooked in a spiced wine syrup made with slightly sweet blush wine (formerly rosé), which is a luscious pink.
2Who knows, the same pattern may soon be discernible in California's blush wines (an apt name if ever there was one).
1The poached white peaches with rose wine jelly look, sound and taste divine.
2The Chateau du Galoupet site in the south of France covers 68 hectares of vineyards, mainly producing rose wine.
4A jury member sniffs a glass of rose wine during the 6th International rose wine competition in Cannes in this April 25, 2009 file photo.
5Get a bottle of Rose wine: This wine equals versatility.
1Rosato heads a weak effort over the bar from the resulting corner.
2Susie Ferguson talks to correspondent in Belfast, Eve Rosato.
3Rosato noted that because paper maps are rarely used any more, they are easy for her to acquire.
4With Rosato shadowing Tostao and Pele being closely watched the Italian defence needed no reminding where the great danger lay.
5Rosato told Wired.co.uk: Through the removal of the land masses, the places almost become ambiguous, since all of the text is lost.
6Police Chief Frederick Rosato said they have a description of the man but do not know of a motive for the attack.
7Artist Nikki Rosato creates intricate portraits by cutting away at old maps, leaving only the roads and rivers behind like a network of blood vessels.