Caesar salad

Etymology
Named after (Italian-born) US restaurateur Caesar Cardini (1896–1956) who is generally thought to have invented it for his Tijuana restaurant in 1924.

Noun

 * 1)  A type of salad, generally made from romaine lettuce, croutons, parmesan cheese, coddled or hard-boiled eggs, fresh-ground black pepper and Worcestershire sauce.
 * Would you like some Caesar salad for lunch?
 * Of all the Caesar salads I've tasted, this is the finest.
 * 1) A serving of such salad.
 * Would you like a Caesar salad for lunch?

Translations

 * Arabic: سَلَطَة قَيْصَر
 * Armenian: Կեսար
 * Azerbaijani: sezar salatı
 * Bengali: সিজার সালাদ
 * Breton: saladenn Caesar
 * Catalan: amanida Cèsar, ensalada Cèsar
 * Chinese:
 * Cantonese: 凱撒沙律
 * Mandarin: 愷撒沙拉, 愷撒色拉
 * Czech: salát Caesar
 * Danish: cæsarsalat
 * Dutch:
 * Estonian: Caesari salat
 * Finnish: caesarsalaatti
 * French:
 * Galician: ensalada César
 * German: Caesar Salad
 * Greek: σαλάτα του Καίσαρα
 * Hindi: सीज़र सलाद
 * Irish: sailéad chaesair
 * Japanese:
 * Korean: ^시저 샐러드
 * Marathi: सीजर सलाड
 * Norwegian:
 * Bokmål: cæsarsalat
 * Nynorsk: cæsarsalat
 * Polish: ,
 * Portuguese: salada Caesar, Caesar salad, salada César
 * Russian: сала́т «Це́зарь»
 * Spanish: ensalada César
 * Swedish:
 * Turkish: Sezar salata
 * Urdu: سیزر سلاد