cream
名词 n.
动词 v.
形容词 adj.
英文释义
名词 n.
-
The butterfat or milkfat part of milk which rises to the top; this part when separated from the remainder.
— Take 100 ml of cream and 50 grams of sugar…
-
The butterfat or milkfat part of milk which rises to the top; this part when separated from the remainder.; The liquid separated from milk, possibly with certain other milk products added, and with at least eighteen percent of it milkfat.
— You may have noticed that any time that filling is mentioned on Oreo packaging, it's called "creme." This is no typo. Technically, the creamy filling inside an Oreo is not cream at all: The recipe used actually contains no dairy; as such, the FDA prohibits Nabisco from labeling the product as "cream."
- The butterfat or milkfat part of milk which rises to the top; this part when separated from the remainder.; The liquid separated from milk containing at least 18 percent milkfat (48% for double cream).
-
The butterfat or milkfat part of milk which rises to the top; this part when separated from the remainder.; A portion of cream, such as the amount found in a creamer.
— I take my coffee with two cream and three sugar.
-
A yellowish white color; the color of cream.
— Hundreds of examples remain, still following the same general pattern—maroon, green or chocolate brown, for example, from ground to waist level, then a stale Cheddar cheese shade of cream above.
-
Frosting, custard, creamer, or another substance similar to the oily part of milk or to whipped cream.
— Originally the cream filling in Oreo cookies was made with pork lard.
- A dish prepared through creaming, particularly cream of
-
The best part of something.
— the cream of the crop
-
A viscous aqueous oil or fat emulsion with a medicament added, used to apply that medicament to the skin. (compare with ointment)
— You look really sunburnt; you should apply some cream.
-
Semen.
— 2001, Darwin Porter, Hollywood’s Silent Closet: The Lusty Saga of America’s First Star F*#%er!! (novel), Blood Moon Productions, Ltd., →ISBN, page 155, He rode me for ten—or was it fifteen?—minutes before one final fuckthrust that filled me completely with his cream.
-
The chrism or consecrated oil used in anointing ceremonies.
— there shall never harlot have happe, by the helpe of Oure Lord, to kylle a crowned Kynge that with Creyme is anoynted.
动词 v.
-
To puree, to blend with a liquifying process.
— Cream the vegetables with the olive oil, flour, salt and water mixture.
- To turn a yellowish white color; to give something the color of cream.
-
To obliterate, to defeat decisively.
— We creamed the opposing team!
-
To ejaculate (used of either gender).
— Danny Zuko: You are supreme / The chicks’ll cream / For grease lightning.
- To ejaculate in (clothing or a bodily orifice).
- To rub, stir, or beat (butter) into a light creamy consistency.
- To skim, or take off by skimming, as cream.
- To take off the best or choicest part of.
-
To furnish with, or as if with, cream.
— Please cream these two coffees and leave the others black.
- To gather or form cream.
形容词 adj.
- Cream-coloured; having a yellowish white colour.
词汇关系
衍生词
barrier cream
Bavarian cream
BB cream
beard cream
Boston cream
Boston cream donut
Boston cream pie
bourbon cream
burnt cream
butter cream
buttercream
Cambridge cream
cat that got the cream
Chantilly cream
clotted cream
clouted cream
coconut cream
codlins and cream
cold cream
confectioner's cream
creamable
cream ale
cream bun
creambush
cream cake
cream cheese
cream cheeze
cream-colored courser
cream corn
cream cracker
cream crackered
cream-crackered
creamcups
creamery
cream-fruit
cream gauge
cream gene
cream Havarti
cream horn
cream in one's coffee
creamish
creamlaid
cream-laid
creamless
creamlike
cream line
creamline
cream liqueur
cream nut
cream of coconut
cream of lime
cream of tartar
cream of tartar bread
cream of tartar tree
cream of the crop
cream of the valley
cream of wheat
creamometer
creamometric
cream pie
creampie
cream puff
cream puff piece
cream rinse
cream sauce
cream sherry
creamsicle
cream skim
cream-skim
cream skimming
cream slice
cream soda
cream soup
cream stew
cream tea
creamware
cream wove
creamy
Creole cream cheese
custard cream
day cream
decream
denture cream
devil's cream
Devonshire cream
diaper cream
diplomat cream
double cream
egg cream
face cream
facial cream
French cream
full cream milk
glacier cream
gypsy cream
hand cream
heavy cream
ice cream
iced cream
Irish cream
Jersey cream
light cream
like the cat that got the cream
maize-cream
mint cream
mock cream
moisturising cream
moisturizing cream
nappy cream
nice cream
night cream
pastry cream
peaches and cream
peaches-and-cream
razor cream
salad cream
shave cream
shaving cream
shoe cream
single cream
skin cream
snow cream
sour cream
soured cream
sports cream
squirty cream
stone cream
strawberries and cream
sugar cream pie
sun cream
suncream
suntan cream
sweet cream
tequila cream
Trinity cream
vanishing cream
whip cream
whipped cream
whipping cream
creamer
cream in one's jeans
cream off
cream one's jeans
cream the crop
cream up
词源
词源 1
From Middle English creime, creme, from Old French creme, cresme, blend of Late Latin chrisma (“ointment”) (from Ancient Greek χρῖσμα (khrîsma, “unguent”)), and Late Latin crāmum (“cream”), from Gaulish *crama (compare Welsh cramen (“scab, skin”), Breton crammen), from Proto-Indo-European *(s)krama- (compare Middle Irish screm (“surface, skin”), Dutch schram (“abrasion”), Lithuanian kramas (“scurf”)). Doublet of crema and crème. Displaced native Old English rēam (“cream”) (> modern ream).
Figurative sense of "most excellent element or part" appears from 1581. Verb meaning "to beat, thrash, wreck" is 1929, U.S. colloquial. The U.S. standard of identity is from 21 CFR 131.3(a).
Figurative sense of "most excellent element or part" appears from 1581. Verb meaning "to beat, thrash, wreck" is 1929, U.S. colloquial. The U.S. standard of identity is from 21 CFR 131.3(a).
词源 2
From Middle English creime, creme, from Old French creme, cresme, blend of Late Latin chrisma (“ointment”) (from Ancient Greek χρῖσμα (khrîsma, “unguent”)), and Late Latin crāmum (“cream”), from Gaulish *crama (compare Welsh cramen (“scab, skin”), Breton crammen), from Proto-Indo-European *(s)krama- (compare Middle Irish screm (“surface, skin”), Dutch schram (“abrasion”), Lithuanian kramas (“scurf”)). Doublet of crema and crème. Displaced native Old English rēam (“cream”) (> modern ream).
Figurative sense of "most excellent element or part" appears from 1581. Verb meaning "to beat, thrash, wreck" is 1929, U.S. colloquial. The U.S. standard of identity is from 21 CFR 131.3(a).
Figurative sense of "most excellent element or part" appears from 1581. Verb meaning "to beat, thrash, wreck" is 1929, U.S. colloquial. The U.S. standard of identity is from 21 CFR 131.3(a).
词源 3
From Middle English creime, creme, from Old French creme, cresme, blend of Late Latin chrisma (“ointment”) (from Ancient Greek χρῖσμα (khrîsma, “unguent”)), and Late Latin crāmum (“cream”), from Gaulish *crama (compare Welsh cramen (“scab, skin”), Breton crammen), from Proto-Indo-European *(s)krama- (compare Middle Irish screm (“surface, skin”), Dutch schram (“abrasion”), Lithuanian kramas (“scurf”)). Doublet of crema and crème. Displaced native Old English rēam (“cream”) (> modern ream).
Figurative sense of "most excellent element or part" appears from 1581. Verb meaning "to beat, thrash, wreck" is 1929, U.S. colloquial. The U.S. standard of identity is from 21 CFR 131.3(a).
Figurative sense of "most excellent element or part" appears from 1581. Verb meaning "to beat, thrash, wreck" is 1929, U.S. colloquial. The U.S. standard of identity is from 21 CFR 131.3(a).
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数据来源: Wiktionary