释义 |
tarttart2 adjective tart2Origin: Old English teart ‘sharp, severe’ - Red currants are quite tart and usually need sugar or honey.
- This tart citrus dressing is great on salads.
- The Cointreau adds some sweetness, but the cranberry juice is tart as well so the overall effect is a tart drink.
- The girl with the tart tongue?
describing the taste of something► delicious having a very good taste: · This cake is delicious!· a delicious meal ► disgusting/revolting having a very bad taste: · The medicine tasted disgusting.· They had to eat revolting things, like fish eyes. ► sweet tasting full of sugar: · The oranges were very sweet. ► tasty especially spoken tasting good and with plenty of flavour: · She cooked us a simple but tasty meal.· That was really tasty! ► sour/tart having a taste that stings your tongue slightly, like lemon does – used especially when this is rather unpleasant: · The apples were a little sour.· The wine has rather a tart taste, which not everyone will like. ► tangy having a taste that stings your tongue slightly, like lemon does, in a way that seems good: · The dressing was nice and tangy. ► bitter having a strong taste which is not sweet and is sometimes rather unpleasant – used for example about black coffee, or chocolate without sugar: · bitter chocolate· The medicine had rather a bitter taste.· Hops give beer its distinctive bitter taste. ► salty containing a lot of salt: · Danish salami has a salty flavour. ► hot/spicy having a burning taste because it contains strong spices: · I love hot curries.· a spicy tomato sauce ► piquant formal a little spicy – used especially by people who write about food. This word can sound rather pretentious in everyday conversation: · cooked vegetables in a piquant sauce ► mild not having a strong or hot taste – usually used about foods that can sometimes be spicy: · a mild curry ► bland not having an interesting taste: · I found the sauce rather bland. ► bitter having a strong sharp taste that is not sweet, like black coffee without sugar – used especially about chocolate, medicine etc: · The dessert is made with a slightly bitter chocolate.· Hops give beer its distinctive bitter taste.· The medicine tasted bitter.· As the lettuce gets older, the leaves become more bitter. ► sharp having a taste that makes your tongue sting slightly: · Rhubarb has quite a sharp taste.· The cheese has a pleasing colour and a pleasantly sharp flavour. ► sour having a usually unpleasant sharp acid taste, like the taste of a lemon, or a fruit that is not ready to be eaten – used especially about fruit, or about liquids that have gone bad: · Some people say that the purpose of the lemon’s sour taste is to stop the fruit being eaten by animals.· Rachel sampled the wine. It was sour. ► acidic very sour – used especially about liquids or things made with fruits such as oranges, lemons, or grapes: · Some fruit juices taste a bit acidic. ► tangy having a taste that is pleasantly strong or sharp, and that often tastes a little sweet as well: · The ribs are cooked in a tangy barbecue sauce. ► tart having a taste that lacks sweetness – used especially about fruit such as apples, which you need to add sugar to: · The pudding had rather a tart flavour.· The trees were covered with tart wild plums. with a sour taste► sour food that is sour , especially fruit, has a taste that stings your tongue slightly, like a lemon does: · The strawberries are a little sour - you may need to put sugar on them.· Kvass is a mild beer that is sometimes used in Russian cooking for its sour flavor. ► tart fruits that are tart , especially apples, sting your tongue and make water come into your mouth: · This tart citrus dressing is great on salads.· Red currants are quite tart and usually need sugar or honey. ► sharp having a strong but pleasant taste that stings your tongue: · The drink had a very sharp lemony taste.· I like this marmalade. It's very sharp.· The lemon juice gives the dressing its sharp flavour. ► tangy having a fresh, pleasant taste that stings your tongue slightly: · The orange juice had a delicious tangy taste.· We made a tangy mayonnaise from yoghurt and honey. ► sour/tart apple (=not at all sweet)· Some people prefer a slightly sour apple. 1food that is tart has a sharp sour taste: a tart apple► see thesaurus at taste2tart reply/remark etc a reply, remark etc that is sharp and unkind—tartly adverb: ‘I don’t think so!’ she replied tartly.—tartness noun [uncountable] |