Pirog

Synonyms for "pirog"

Ranked by relevance and common usage.

Related word relations

OpenGloss and ConceptNet supply richer edges like generalizations, collocations, and derivations.

2 relation types

is a

1 entries

related to

1 entries

Translations

20 translations across 18 languages.

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Azerbaijani

1 entries
  • piroq noun (baked good)

Belarusian

1 entries
  • піро́г noun (baked good)

Bulgarian

1 entries
  • пиро́г noun (baked good)

Estonian

1 entries
  • pirukas noun (baked good)

Finnish

2 entries
  • keitinpiiras noun (baked good)
  • piirakka noun (baked good)

French

1 entries
  • pirog noun (baked good)

German

1 entries
  • Pirogge noun (baked good)

Kazakh

1 entries
  • пирог noun (baked good)

Kyrgyz

1 entries
  • пирог noun (baked good)

Latvian

1 entries
  • pīrāgs noun (baked good)

Lithuanian

1 entries
  • pyragas noun (baked good)

Polish

1 entries
  • pieróg noun (baked good)

Russian

2 entries
  • пиро́г noun (baked good)
  • пирожо́к noun (baked good)

Slovak

1 entries
  • piroh noun (baked good)

Tajik

1 entries
  • пирог noun (baked good)

Ukrainian

1 entries
  • пирі́г noun (baked good)

Uzbek

1 entries
  • pirog noun (baked good)

Yiddish

1 entries
  • פּיראָג noun (baked good)

Sample sentences

3 total sentences available.

Tatoeba + Wiktionary

On such a day it was the custom, some sixty years ago, to bake several immense pirogs of cake dough; one of these pirogs was stuffed with hard-boiled eggs and sometimes also with kasha, while the others had no fillings; it was these latter that were sent to various relatives as a sign of affection.

Source: wiktionary

At the festival one can take chai sweetened with raspberry preserves or honey as they did in the old days and with the chai selected from an assortment of tantalizing delicacies including rum and honey babas, vareneky,^([sic – meaning vareniki]) poppyseed roll, piroshki, blini, apple pirog, hvorost (sometimes called khrustiki), tea cakes, cheese tortes and more, all made by the women and men of the parish.

Source: wiktionary

Pirogs are eaten in Russia with soup and can be filled with meat, ham, fish or cheese, but they are usually stuffed with herbs and are not unlike the herby pastes that were so much in vogue in England in the eighteenth century.

Source: wiktionary

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