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Silty vs. Gumbo

Difference Between Silty and Gumbo

Silty

A sedimentary material consisting of very fine particles intermediate in size between sand and clay.
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Gumbo

Gumbo (Louisiana Creole: Gombo) is a soup popular in the U.S. state of Louisiana, and is the official state cuisine. Gumbo consists primarily of a strongly-flavored stock, meat or shellfish, a thickener, and the Creole "holy trinity" ― celery, bell peppers, and onions.
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Silty

To become filled with silt
an old channel that silted up.
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Gumbo

okra, especially the gelatinous pods used in cooking.
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Silty

To fill, cover, or obstruct with silt
River sediments gradually silted the harbor.
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Gumbo

a French-based patois spoken by some blacks and Creoles in Louisiana.
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Silty

Having a noticeable amount of silt.
The silty river needed its channel dredged periodically to remain navigable.
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Gumbo

a fine clayey soil that becomes sticky and impervious when wet.
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Silty

Resembling or characteristic of silt.
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Gumbo

a type of Cajun music consisting of a lively blend of styles and sounds
New Orleans syncopated gumbo
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Silty

Full of silt; resembling silt.
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Gumbo

Chiefly Southern US See okra.
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Silty

full of silt;
silty soil
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Gumbo

A soup or stew thickened with okra pods. Also called okra.
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Gumbo

Chiefly Mississippi Valley & Western US A fine silty soil, common in the southern and western United States, that forms an unusually sticky mud when wet.
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Gumbo

Gumbo A French patois spoken by some black people and Creoles in Louisiana and the French West Indies.
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Gumbo

(countable) okra: the plant or its edible capsules.
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Gumbo

(countable) A soup or stew popular in Louisiana, consisting of a strong stock, meat or shellfish, a thickener (often okra), and the "Holy Trinity" of celery, bell peppers, and onions.
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Gumbo

(uncountable) A fine silty soil that when wet becomes very thick and heavy.
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Gumbo

A soup thickened with the mucilaginous pods of the okra; okra soup.
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Gumbo

The okra plant or its pods.
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Gumbo

any of various fine-grained silty soils that become waxy and very sticky mud when saturated with water
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Gumbo

tall coarse annual of Old World tropics widely cultivated in southern United States and West Indies for its long mucilaginous green pods used as basis for soups and stews; sometimes placed in genus Hibiscus
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Gumbo

long mucilaginous green pods; may be simmered or sauteed but used especially in soups and stews
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Gumbo

a soup or stew thickened with okra pods
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