释义 |
‖ rognon|rɔɲɔ̃| [Fr.] 1. Chiefly pl. In Gastronomy, (a dish of) kidneys. Also attrib. and Comb.
1828Lytton Pelham I. xii. 79 What cook can possibly respect men who..eat rognons at dinner instead of at breakfast. c1864S. O. Beeton in N. Spain Mrs. Beeton (1948) ii. vi. 212 Everybody had just well breakfasted upon cotelletes, omelettes, Rognons. 1877C. Reade Woman-Hater I. v. 97 After the rognons à la brochette, and a bottle of champagne, he let out. 1923A. Huxley Antic Hay iv. 61 ‘And where are my rognons sautés?’ he shouted at the waiter. 1967A. Wilson No Laughing Matter iii. 337 She..cooked specially for him as she had not done for ages, rognons Bercy and omelette confiture. 1972Guardian 11 Mar. 15/3 [The] Brasserie du Nord..is noted..for its saucisson and rognon dishes. 1979Times 15 Dec. 6/6 My mother followed the sun... She lay down..darkening like rognons on a spit. 2. Mountaineering. A rounded outcrop of rock or stones surrounded by a glacier or an ice-field.
1935S. Spencer Mountaineering 364 Rognon, rounded rock in the centre of a glacier. 1957R. G. Collomb Dict. Mountaineering 127 In Victorian days some rognons were used as sleeping places.., e.g. the Stöckje on the Scheonbuhl [sic] glacier near Zermatt. 1958Jrnl. Glaciology III. 264 On the upper parts of the Glaciar Universidad there had been little change. After 1945 the surface sank slightly around a rognon (rounded nunatak) at 3930 m. 1963Oxford Mountaineering 11 At the top of the rognon the snow steepened and we had to traverse up and round to the foot of the..couloir which leads on to the face. 1973C. Bonington Next Horizon xxi. 279 Our way lay across the glacier and up a rognon, a sort of island of rocks round which the glacier flowed on either side. |