| 释义 | 
		Definition of yakisoba in English: yakisobanoun ˌjakɪˈsəʊbəˌyäkēˈsōbə mass nounA Japanese dish of fried noodles, vegetables, and meat, served with a thick, sweetish sauce.  dishes such as red curry soup, yakisoba, and pad thai taste fresh and honest Example sentencesExamples -  We have invited and invited you to come to Japan, eat sushi, sashimi, yakitori, yakisoba, and to drink saki or awamori with us and still you haven't come.
 -  Much to my surprise, about ten minutes later that very same person came walking up to me with a big steaming plate of fresh yakisoba.
 -  The party was outside in a carpark, lined with stalls selling yakisoba, yakiniku, corn, and grilled seafood, and of course beer.
 -  For the last tasting I chose Yakisoba, Japanese-fried noodles with cabbage, carrots, sweet corn, mushroom, squid and pork strips topped with marinated ginger and seaweed flakes.
 -  The next instalment of our oriental odyssey was the seafood yakisoba.
 -  I prefer the pancake without yakisoba.
 -  They trained and hired the French-trained Dutchman who succeeds brilliantly in creating traditional pancakes and noodles (yakisoba).
 -  There is a Japanese station with Miso soup, assorted sushi and sashimi (and Miss Terry's favourite wasabe) as well as sukiyaki, yakisoba and tempura.
 -  After all, the yakisoba on the table between us tasted just as sweet.
 -  "Japanese will order a plate of yakisoba," or fried noodles, "and split it among four people," she said.
 -  Wandering around we found a plethora of yakisoba (fried noodles), yakitori, steak on a stick, big boiled buttered potatoes, corn on the cob, a doner kebab stall, and much more besides.
 -  I ate some yakisoba and other standard festival fare before setting up my tripod and getting ready to attempt to photograph the action.
 -  The yakisoba really hit the spot since I hadn't planned on hiking up a large mountain and I didn't bring any lunch with me.
 -  My mouth waters at the memory of the yakisoba.
 
 
 OriginJapanese, from yaki 'grilling, frying' + soba (here referring to wheat rather than buckwheat noodles, originally as part of a longer Japanese term).    Definition of yakisoba in US English: yakisobanounˌyäkēˈsōbə A Japanese dish of fried noodles, vegetables, and meat, served with a thick, sweetish sauce.  dishes such as red curry soup, yakisoba, and pad thai taste fresh and honest Example sentencesExamples -  After all, the yakisoba on the table between us tasted just as sweet.
 -  There is a Japanese station with Miso soup, assorted sushi and sashimi (and Miss Terry's favourite wasabe) as well as sukiyaki, yakisoba and tempura.
 -  For the last tasting I chose Yakisoba, Japanese-fried noodles with cabbage, carrots, sweet corn, mushroom, squid and pork strips topped with marinated ginger and seaweed flakes.
 -  I prefer the pancake without yakisoba.
 -  My mouth waters at the memory of the yakisoba.
 -  Much to my surprise, about ten minutes later that very same person came walking up to me with a big steaming plate of fresh yakisoba.
 -  The next instalment of our oriental odyssey was the seafood yakisoba.
 -  They trained and hired the French-trained Dutchman who succeeds brilliantly in creating traditional pancakes and noodles (yakisoba).
 -  The party was outside in a carpark, lined with stalls selling yakisoba, yakiniku, corn, and grilled seafood, and of course beer.
 -  The yakisoba really hit the spot since I hadn't planned on hiking up a large mountain and I didn't bring any lunch with me.
 -  Wandering around we found a plethora of yakisoba (fried noodles), yakitori, steak on a stick, big boiled buttered potatoes, corn on the cob, a doner kebab stall, and much more besides.
 -  We have invited and invited you to come to Japan, eat sushi, sashimi, yakitori, yakisoba, and to drink saki or awamori with us and still you haven't come.
 -  I ate some yakisoba and other standard festival fare before setting up my tripod and getting ready to attempt to photograph the action.
 -  "Japanese will order a plate of yakisoba," or fried noodles, "and split it among four people," she said.
 
 
 OriginJapanese, from yaki ‘grilling, frying’ + soba (here referring to wheat rather than buckwheat noodles, originally as part of a longer Japanese term).     |