Sushi

//ˈsuʃi//

"Sushi" in a Sentence (26 examples)

Sushi is good, but Thai dishes are better.

The sushi at this shop tastes good.

This sushi is seasoned with plenty of horse-radish.

Quite a few Americans like sushi.

Let's have sushi.

Which do you like better, sushi or tempura?

You ate sushi yesterday, didn't you?

How about going to a sushi bar right now?

Do you want to have sushi tonight?

It was disappointing that nobody ate the expensive sushi I had served.

For the vegetarians, she served cucumber sushi.

He went to a Japanese restaurant and ordered sushi and noodles.

Suzuributa.—Mashed fish, eggs, 'sushi' of shrimps, plum cake, black mushroom, plum, and finely cut orange.

Not long ago a newspaper reporter came to interview me on the subject of unusual foods, and I described to him the persimmon-leaf sushi made by the people who live deep in the mountains of Yoshino—and which I shall take the opportunity to introduce to you here.

I lived in New York all my life. We used to have Chinese restaurants, ltalian restaurants. Now you have these sushi restaurants. Everyone goes for sushi. Sushi—I hate the stuff. Although, I tell you, I had some the other day. I took it home, I cooked it, it wasn't bad. It tasted like fish.

To appreciate sushi, you have to forget the tastes and textures that come with Western cuisine. At first glance (or should I say taste?), a sushi of flounder will not be that different from a sushi of sea bream. But, for the Japanese, these two sushi are as different as roast beef and roast pork are for a Westerner.

As Trevor Corson, author of “The Story of Sushi” explains, in Japan, sushi is typically eaten at a bar, where it’s customary for the customer to chat with the chef, who can recommend what’s in season. The short window during which the fish is fresh also makes it more likely to be tastier in Japan.

You will recall that, contrary to the relative appearance of the words, the sashimi are the simple raw fish slices and the sushi are the rolls of rice and raw fish.

Rusty put a sushi in her palm. / Mary Kate popped it into her mouth. It tasted salty and crunchy. “Cucumber!” she said. / “My grandmother puts a surprise in the middle of each one,” said Rusty.

I reach out and pop a sushi into my mouth while I’m waiting for someone to answer a question.

Startled by the venom, Erik almost dropped a sushi into his mixture of soy sauce and wasabi.

'Can't eat sushi?' I said. Then Mom said, 'You can't eat uncooked fish when you're pregnant' as if I'm the one stupid enough to go and get pregnant!

Our finned friends come in all varieties: sushi-ed, fresh, smoked and otherwise packaged for your consumption.

Then there are the "Sushi" neighborhoods and towns - a mixture of some Sunni, some Shia, hence Sushi

... particularly from the Sunnis you talked to, and the Shias were always angry. (Ali calls himself Sushi so it's kind of a mixture.)

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Reality proved quite different. Ahmed is half Sunni, half Shia—a “Sushi,” in his own words

Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.