Sentence examples for a loup from inspiring English sources

The phrase "a loup" is not correct in standard written English.
It appears to be a mix of English and French, where "loup" means "wolf" in French. In English, it would not be used in this form.
Example: "I saw a wolf in the forest."
Alternatives: "a wolf" or "one wolf".

Exact(4)

Some signs compared him to a "loup garou," a Haitian demon who preys on the blood of babies.

It's an excellent dish, and so is a loup de mer entree that floats morels in an unusually light, luxuriant coconut and green curry emulsion.

We had a loup and a dorade anyway, caught in someone's nets, at a table on the sand at Chez Mathieu.

Inspection was performed with use of a loup (Carl Zeiss, Jena, Germany, magnification × 2.3).

Similar(56)

There is a French motto: "Quand c'est flou, il y a un loup", meaning when it is blurred, there is a wolf – a danger.

Stars are coddled with Parmesan lace, young shoots of mesclun, the zest of local lemons, rich poultry jus and the flavors of Provence, such as a roast loup de mer with fennel mousseline and a tomato beurre blanc perfumed with the spices of the South of France.

At the fruit and vegetables stall, an old woman beckons me over: "There's a French expression," she says "Quand c'est flou, c'est qu'il y a un loup".

During a recent conversation in a corner of Café Loup, a favorite close to her West Village home, that suggestion sent Ms. Clarkson into a characteristic riff: "Yeah, a weapon with a greasy dark wig!" she cracked, her tempered contralto rising into laughter.

The Baseball Cube's player ratings, which are based solely on statistics on a scale from 0-100, gave Loup a 69 for control, a 62 for "K-rating", or strikeouts compared to batters faced, a 62 for efficiency, and a 52 for "vsPower", or home runs compared to batters faced.

By Ivonne Young and John McCarten The New Yorker, February 2 , 1963P. 24 Incidental Intelligence: A recent issue of the Paris magazine "Jours de France" refers to a current Broadway success as "Qui A Peur des Loups de Virginie?" View Article By Alan Burdick By Larissa MacFarquhar By Charles Bethea By Masha Gessen.

By Ivonne Young and John McCarten The New Yorker, February 2 , 1963P. 24 Incidental Intelligence: A recent issue of the Paris magazine "Jours de France" refers to a current Broadway success as "Qui A Peur des Loups de Virginie?" View Article By Rebecca Mead By Jia Tolentino By Anthony Lane By Alan Burdick.

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