English language

How to pronounce culotte in English?

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Type Words
Type of skirt

Examples of culotte

culotte
Compare the sans-culotte on the left to the culotte-wearer on the right.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Cannabis-infused butter seeped from an onion-bacon-potato tart served with roast culotte.
From the latimes.com
One culotte dress had large, oval-cut armholes, another a V neck slashed almost to the navel.
From the time.com
Especially culotte steak is a classic dish to serve for guests.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Instead of the more frequently used brisket, Bogart's brines a better quality cut from the top sirloin called a culotte.
From the stltoday.com
Models wore tweed, suede or boucle coats over a three-piece menswear plaid suit and a gray-flannel culotte version.
From the delawareonline.com
Then they got belts for their game shorts, which are actually shorts and not the culotte-length uniforms some teams prefer.
From the denverpost.com
At one year, major adverse cardiac events occurred in 6.2 percent of the DK crush patients and 16.3 percent of the culotte patients.
From the sciencedaily.com
Savory items on the prix fixe menu will include beef tartare with black truffles, scallops with country ham, squab with bacon-foie gras, and Kobe culotte steaks with French horn mushrooms.
From the stltoday.com
More examples
  • A divided skirt
  • The word culottes is of French language origin. Historically, the word "culottes" has always referred to the knee-breeches commonly worn by gentlemen of the European upper-classes from the late Middle Ages or Renaissance through the early 19th century. ...
  • Culottes
  • (Culottes) Informal trouser-like garment with wide cropped legs giving the illusion of a full skirt. examples
  • (Culottes) Are not correct dress Spanish ridden classes.
  • (culottes) loose-fitting women's shorts cut below the knee, resembling skirts.
  • The longer hair on the back of the thighs.
  • French breeches in the 17. century, usually from silk. A precursor and model of the Kniebundlederhose.
  • Late 17th century replacement for chauses in variable lengths and sizes.