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Barsac

[ bahr-sak; French bar-sak ]

noun

  1. a village and winegrowing district in Gironde, in SW France.
  2. a sweet, white Sauterne from here.


Barsac

/ barsak; ˈbɑːsæk /

noun

  1. a sweet French white wine produced around the town of Barsac in the Gironde
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Wine guilds, such as the Commanderie du Bontemps du Médoc et des Graves, Sauternes et Barsac on the Left Bank, and the Jurade in Saint-Émilion on the Right, celebrate this history and tradition with processions and banquets, their members bedecked in fancy robes.

From

In May on Nantucket, a dinner of old Bordeaux finished up with Château Climens 2005 from Barsac, a region within the greater Sauternes appellation.

From

The curatorial committee was made up of the designer’s daughter, Pernette Perriand, an architect herself; Ms. Perriand’s husband, Jacques Barsac, a writer who is the author of his mother-in-law’s catalog raisonné; Sébastien Cherruet, the head of institutional relations at the luxury conglomerate LVMH; and the art historians Gladys Fabre and Sébastien Gokalp.

From

According to Mr. Barsac’s “Charlotte Perriand: Complete Works,” the fourth volume of which will be published in English this fall, she first traveled to Japan in 1940 at the invitation of the government to advise its leaders on industrial art.

From

“It’s a 1921 Barsac, but it’s open now.”

From

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