"Sukaldea" is a Basque equivalent of "kitchen."
There are seven provinces that make up the Basque Country (Euzkadi). The four provinces that straddle the French-Spanish border to the south are Araba, Bizkaia, Gipuzoa and Nafarroa. The three provinces that straddle that same international border to the north are Lapurdi, Nafarroa Beherea and Zuberoa.
There are regional and even local differences in the accents, cultures and histories of the seven provinces. But despite an interaction with France in the north and with Spain in the south, there always have been many points of unity and unification among all seven. One such unifying factor is in the delicious, often hearty and sometimes surprising masterpieces of rural and urban Basque cooking.
"Kitchen" is an English equivalent of "sukaldea."A traditional Basque house in the countryside may be described as having an organic form that fits in with the environment and the people's activities. Specifically, traditional livelihoods on Basque properties have centered on crop and livestock raising, particularly of sheep. So the kitchen is an important center of the Basque house, for processing and serving those farm crops and animals that are meant for the family, and not for the market.
In Basque, Basque is called "Euskara."
Basque is the language of the Basque people, who inhabit the Basque Country, a region spanning an area in northeastern Spain and southwestern France.
Basque is spoken in Basque Country in Spain.
The Basque people. Euskara is the Basque word for Basque.
There is a Basque community in Boise, Idaho.
Kiaxo is 'Hello' in Basque.
The basque people are a culture that reside in the Basque Country which is in the Northern part of Spain and southwest of France.
"Gaztelu" is a Basque equivalent of "castle."The Basque word is a noun. A Basque equivalent of "one castle" is "bat gaztelu." The pronunciation is "baht gah-STEH-loo."
Euzko Alderdi is a Basque equivalent of the English phrase "Basque party".Specifically, the adjective euzko means "Basque". The noun alderdi translates as "(political) party". The pronunciation will be "ey-oo-sko al-der-dee" by those who speak Guipuzcoan Basque.
gâteau basque.
Gasteiz in Basque, Vitoria in Spanish.