snail as food
0 sources
snail as food
Summary
snail as food is a type of food or dish[1]. It draws 669 Wikipedia views per month (type_of_food_or_dish category, ranking #38 of 297).[2]
Key Facts
- snail as food's image is recorded as Escargots 3.jpg[3].
- snail as food's image is recorded as Caracoles-del-restaurante-granero.jpg[4].
- snail as food's instance of is recorded as type of food or dish[5].
- snail as food's made from material is recorded as Helix pomatia[6].
- snail as food's subclass of is recorded as Land Snail[7].
- snail as food's subclass of is recorded as food[8].
- snail as food's subclass of is recorded as meat dish[9].
- snail as food's subclass of is recorded as gastropod as food[10].
- snail as food's Commons category is recorded as Snails as food[11].
- snail as food's said to be the same as is recorded as Escargots à la bourguignonne[12].
- snail as food's country of origin is recorded as Morocco[13].
- snail as food's country of origin is recorded as Spain[14].
- snail as food's country of origin is recorded as France[15].
- snail as food's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/02sp32[16].
- snail as food's UNII is recorded as V7BWF76AP0[17].
- snail as food's UNII is recorded as C938N2E5JN[18].
- snail as food's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Escargots (food)[19].
- snail as food's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Snail-based food[20].
- snail as food's Commons gallery is recorded as Escargot[21].
- snail as food's different from is recorded as Escargots à la bourguignonne[22].
- snail as food's Google Knowledge Graph ID is recorded as /g/121qycqp[23].
- snail as food's Great Norwegian Encyclopedia ID is recorded as escargot[24].
- snail as food's TasteAtlas ID is recorded as escargot[25].
- snail as food's FoodOn ID is recorded as 00002244[26].
- snail as food's WordNet 3.1 Synset ID is recorded as 07798451-n[27].
Why It Matters
snail as food draws 669 Wikipedia views per month (type_of_food_or_dish category, ranking #38 of 297).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 20 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] It is known by 9 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]