hot cross bun - significado y definición. Qué es hot cross bun
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Qué (quién) es hot cross bun - definición


Hot cross bun         
  • An 1884 advertisement announcing the sale of hot cross buns for Good Friday in a Hawaiian newspaper.
  • Hot cross bun, with a piped cross made from flour paste, cut in two
SPICED SWEET BUN MADE WITH CURRANTS OR RAISINS AND MARKED WITH A CROSS ON THE TOP, TRADITIONALLY EATEN ON GOOD FRIDAY
Hot cross buns; Hot Cross Bun; Cross buns; Hot-cross bun; Hot Crust Buns; Not cross bun; Hot Cross Buns
A hot cross bun is a spiced sweet bun usually made with fruit, marked with a cross on the top, and has been traditionally eaten on Good Friday in the United Kingdom, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, Canada, India, Pakistan and the United States. They are available all year round in some places, including the UK.
hot cross bun         
  • An 1884 advertisement announcing the sale of hot cross buns for Good Friday in a Hawaiian newspaper.
  • Hot cross bun, with a piped cross made from flour paste, cut in two
SPICED SWEET BUN MADE WITH CURRANTS OR RAISINS AND MARKED WITH A CROSS ON THE TOP, TRADITIONALLY EATEN ON GOOD FRIDAY
Hot cross buns; Hot Cross Bun; Cross buns; Hot-cross bun; Hot Crust Buns; Not cross bun; Hot Cross Buns
¦ noun a bun marked with a cross and containing dried fruit, traditionally eaten on Good Friday.
Hot Cross Buns (song)         
  • The rhyme as it appears in an 1860s book of Nursery rhymes printed in London
NURSERY RHYME
Hot Cross Bun (song); Hot Cross Buns (nursery rhyme)
Hot Cross Buns was an English street cry, later perpetuated as a nursery rhyme and an aid in musical education. It refers to the spiced English confection known as a hot cross bun, which is associated with the end of Lent and is eaten on Good Friday in various countries.
Ejemplos de uso de hot cross bun
1. Blackburn and Darwen Council banned kids from picking up litter "in case it contained dog faeces" and went on to ban the back–stroke in local swimming pools to "avoid collisions". × A crazy over–cautious approach prompted Norwich Council to threaten a cull of chestnut trees in case kids were hit by conkers and a decision by Suffolk County Council to ban hanging baskets for fear of them falling on passers–by – even though it had never happened in Britain before! × During Easter 2003 officials at councils across the country, including Tower Hamlets in London, Liverpool, Wolverhampton and Wakefield, binned the traditional hot cross bun as it had the "potential to offend" faiths other than Christian.