释义 |
Definition of comestible in English: comestiblenoun kəˈmɛstɪb(ə)lkəˈmɛstəbəl usually comestibleshumorous, formal An item of food. 食物,食品 a fridge groaning with comestibles 装满食物的冰箱。 Example sentencesExamples - Particularly lacking in a food desert are fresh comestibles: all food available is processed or precooked, full of salt and the worst kind of fat, and lacking in vital ingredients.
- Do not, under any circumstances, provide them with comestibles containing sugar.
- The fundamental idea is that porridge, pulses, whole-grains and other hippie comestibles eliminate the hunger pangs born of sugar lows; they keep you satiated for longer, leaving you less open to the pernicious call of the fridge.
- Now go all the way - check out their desserts and other comestibles.
- Six of Edmonton's most scrumptious purveyors of comestibles along with a dessert and scotch supplier will donate some of their best wares to the event.
Synonyms nourishment, sustenance, nutriment, subsistence, fare, bread, daily bread fodder, feed, forage, herbage, pasturage, silage
adjective kəˈmɛstɪb(ə)lkəˈmɛstəbəl humorous, formal Edible. 可食用的 sugar, coffee, and sundry other comestible requisites Example sentencesExamples - Women could point out the medicinal and comestible plants with which they are particularly familiar.
- When the microwaved frozen produce of pizza and pasta chains is the height of culinary standards, as it is for many, we should hang our heads in comestible shame.
- They haul every kind of comestible sea creature out of the Mediterranean, pile them high in the market and cook them with simple elegance.
- ‘Hardtack’, as the soldiers called this, represented the zenith of comestible durability and the nadir of taste.
- We were about to help celebrate the falling of one of the last, and among the most storied, comestible taboos in our European culture.
Synonyms juicy, moist, luscious, lush, fleshy, pulpy, soft, tender, fresh, ripe
OriginLate 15th century: from Old French, from medieval Latin comestibilis, from Latin comest- 'eaten up', from the verb comedere, from com- 'altogether' + edere 'eat'. eat from Old English: For such a fundamental concept, it is unsurprising that eat is an Old English word, with an ancient root shared by Latin edere ‘to eat’. This is the source not only of edible (late 16th century), but also comestible (Late Middle English) ‘something edible’, edacious (early 19th century), a rare word for ‘greedy’, and obese (mid 17th century) from obedere ‘eat completely’. There are many phrases associated with eating. Eat, drink, and be merry, for tomorrow we die is a combination of two Biblical sayings, ‘A man hath no better thing under the sun, than to eat and to drink, and to be merry’ (Ecclesiastes) and ‘Let us eat and drink; for tomorrow we shall die’ (Isaiah). You are what you eat is a proverb that first appeared in English in the 1920s. It is a translation of the German phrase Der Mensch ist, was er isst, ‘Man is what he eats’, which was said by the philosopher Ludwig Feuerbach (1804–72). If you eat your heart out you suffer from excessive longing or grief. As eat your own heart the phrase was first used in Edmund Spenser's The Faerie Queene (1596): ‘He could not rest; but did his stout heart eat.’ See also fret
Definition of comestible in US English: comestiblenounkəˈmestəbəlkəˈmɛstəbəl usually comestiblesAn item of food. 食物,食品 a fridge groaning with comestibles 装满食物的冰箱。 Example sentencesExamples - The fundamental idea is that porridge, pulses, whole-grains and other hippie comestibles eliminate the hunger pangs born of sugar lows; they keep you satiated for longer, leaving you less open to the pernicious call of the fridge.
- Six of Edmonton's most scrumptious purveyors of comestibles along with a dessert and scotch supplier will donate some of their best wares to the event.
- Do not, under any circumstances, provide them with comestibles containing sugar.
- Particularly lacking in a food desert are fresh comestibles: all food available is processed or precooked, full of salt and the worst kind of fat, and lacking in vital ingredients.
- Now go all the way - check out their desserts and other comestibles.
Synonyms nourishment, sustenance, nutriment, subsistence, fare, bread, daily bread fodder, feed, forage, herbage, pasturage, silage
adjectivekəˈmestəbəlkəˈmɛstəbəl Edible. 可食用的 Example sentencesExamples - They haul every kind of comestible sea creature out of the Mediterranean, pile them high in the market and cook them with simple elegance.
- When the microwaved frozen produce of pizza and pasta chains is the height of culinary standards, as it is for many, we should hang our heads in comestible shame.
- We were about to help celebrate the falling of one of the last, and among the most storied, comestible taboos in our European culture.
- Women could point out the medicinal and comestible plants with which they are particularly familiar.
- ‘Hardtack’, as the soldiers called this, represented the zenith of comestible durability and the nadir of taste.
Synonyms juicy, moist, luscious, lush, fleshy, pulpy, soft, tender, fresh, ripe
OriginLate 15th century: from Old French, from medieval Latin comestibilis, from Latin comest- ‘eaten up’, from the verb comedere, from com- ‘altogether’ + edere ‘eat’. |