Tabasco$81331$ - meaning and definition. What is Tabasco$81331$
Diclib.com
ChatGPT AI Dictionary
Enter a word or phrase in any language 👆
Language:

Translation and analysis of words by ChatGPT artificial intelligence

On this page you can get a detailed analysis of a word or phrase, produced by the best artificial intelligence technology to date:

  • how the word is used
  • frequency of use
  • it is used more often in oral or written speech
  • word translation options
  • usage examples (several phrases with translation)
  • etymology

What (who) is Tabasco$81331$ - definition

VARIETY OF CHILI PEPPER
Tabasco chile; Tabasco chili; Tabasco peppers
  • Tabasco pepper on its bush in the [[Bergianska botanical gardens]], Stockholm, 2013

Tabasco         
  • Scene from the 2007 floods
  • Tamborileros de Tabasco}}, traditional music of Tabasco
  • 110px
  • Temple IV in Comalcalco
  • Comalcalco]]
  • 120px
  • Scene from the Feria Tabasco
  • Opening of the Coconá Caverns
  • 120px
  • Image of the U.S. invasion of Villahermosa
  • 125px
  • 125px
  • thumb
  • 23px
  • 109x109px
  • 23px
  • 125px
  • 120px
  • 125px
  • View of the port of Dos Bocas
  • 125px
  • Regions of Tabasco
  • Group of revolutionaries from Tabasco
  • 120px
  • 120px
  • 120px
  • 120px
  • 125px
  • 120px
  • 120px
  • Rafting in Tenosique
  • The entrance of [[Hernán Cortés]] into the city of Tabasco
  • Government Palace of Tabasco in Villahermosa
  • [[Villahermosa International Airport]]
  • 120px
  • View of [[Villahermosa]], the capital of Tabasco
  • [[Grijalva River]] flowing through [[Villahermosa]]
  • Zapateo, the traditional dance of Tabasco
STATE OF MEXICO
Tabasco state; Tabasco (state); Estado Libre y Soberano de Tabasco; MX-TAB; State of Tabasco; Tabasco (Mexican state); Tabasco State; Tabasco, Mexico; Economy of Tabasco; Tourism in Tabasco; Free and Sovereign State of Tabasco; History of Tabasco; Geography of Tabasco; Climate of Tabasco; Government of Tabasco
Tabasco is a hot spicy sauce made from peppers. (TRADEMARK)
N-UNCOUNT
Tabasco         
  • Scene from the 2007 floods
  • Tamborileros de Tabasco}}, traditional music of Tabasco
  • 110px
  • Temple IV in Comalcalco
  • Comalcalco]]
  • 120px
  • Scene from the Feria Tabasco
  • Opening of the Coconá Caverns
  • 120px
  • Image of the U.S. invasion of Villahermosa
  • 125px
  • 125px
  • thumb
  • 23px
  • 109x109px
  • 23px
  • 125px
  • 120px
  • 125px
  • View of the port of Dos Bocas
  • 125px
  • Regions of Tabasco
  • Group of revolutionaries from Tabasco
  • 120px
  • 120px
  • 120px
  • 120px
  • 125px
  • 120px
  • 120px
  • Rafting in Tenosique
  • The entrance of [[Hernán Cortés]] into the city of Tabasco
  • Government Palace of Tabasco in Villahermosa
  • [[Villahermosa International Airport]]
  • 120px
  • View of [[Villahermosa]], the capital of Tabasco
  • [[Grijalva River]] flowing through [[Villahermosa]]
  • Zapateo, the traditional dance of Tabasco
STATE OF MEXICO
Tabasco state; Tabasco (state); Estado Libre y Soberano de Tabasco; MX-TAB; State of Tabasco; Tabasco (Mexican state); Tabasco State; Tabasco, Mexico; Economy of Tabasco; Tourism in Tabasco; Free and Sovereign State of Tabasco; History of Tabasco; Geography of Tabasco; Climate of Tabasco; Government of Tabasco
[t?'bask??]
¦ noun trademark a pungent sauce made from capsicums.
Origin
C19: named after the Mexican state of Tabasco.
Tabasco sauce         
  • Tabasco pepper mash aging in barrels on Avery Island, Louisiana.
  • 1905}}. Note the cork-top bottle and diamond logo label, which is similar to those in use today.
  • A few of the varieties of Tabasco sauce, with the original on the far right.
  • MRE]], middle right
US BRAND OF HOT SAUCE
Tabasco Sauce; Mcilhenny company; McIlhenny Company; E. McIlhenny; Tobasco Sauce; Tobacco sauce; TABASCO; Tabasco Brand Pepper Sauce; The Unofficial MRE Cookbook; Tabasco (sauce)
·add. ·- A kind of very pungent sauce made from red peppers.

Wikipedia

Tabasco pepper

The tabasco pepper is a variety of the chili pepper species Capsicum frutescens originating in Mexico. It is best known through its use in Tabasco sauce, followed by peppered vinegar.

Like all C. frutescens cultivars, the tabasco plant has a typical bushy growth, which commercial cultivation makes stronger by trimming the plants. The tapered fruits, around 4 cm long, are initially pale yellowish-green and turn yellow and orange before ripening to bright red. Tabascos rate from 30,000 to 50,000 on the Scoville scale of heat levels, and are the only variety of chili pepper whose fruits are "juicy", i.e., not dry on the inside. Tabasco fruits, like all other members of the C. frutescens species, remain upright when mature, rather than hanging down from their stems.

A large part of the tabasco pepper stock fell victim to the tobacco mosaic virus in the 1960s; the first resistant variety (Greenleaf tabasco) was not cultivated until around 1970.