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tang
Tang T0034600 (täng) A Chinese dynasty (618-907) known for its territorial expansion, prosperity, and encouragement of the arts and literature. [Mandarin, T´ng, from Middle Chinese tɦaŋ, to boast, great, Tang dynasty.]
tang 1 T0034400 (tăng)n.1. A distinctively sharp taste, flavor, or odor, as that of orange juice.2. A distinctive quality: "Underneath it all was the tang of genuine adventure" (Jan Clausen).3. A sharp point, tongue, or prong.4. A projection by which a tool, such as a chisel or knife, is attached to its handle or stock. Also called shank.5. See surgeonfish.tr.v. tanged, tang·ing, tangs 1. To furnish with a tang.2. To give a tang to. [Middle English tange, of Scandinavian origin; akin to Old Norse tangi, point, sting.] tang′i·ness n.tang′y adj.
tang 2 T0034400 (tăng)n. A loud ringing sound; a clang or twang.intr. & tr.v. tanged, tang·ing, tangs To resound with a tang or cause to resound with a tang. [Imitative.]tang (tæŋ) n1. a strong taste or flavour: the tang of the sea. 2. a pungent or characteristic smell: the tang of peat fires. 3. a trace, touch, or hint of something: a tang of cloves in the apple pie. 4. (Tools) the pointed end of a tool, such as a chisel, file, knife, etc, which is fitted into a handle, shaft, or stock[C14: from Old Norse tangi point; related to Danish tange point, spit]
Tang (tæŋ) n (Historical Terms) the imperial dynasty of China from 618–907 adtang1 (tæŋ) n. 1. a strong taste or flavor. 2. a pungent or distinctive odor. 3. the distinctive character of a thing. 4. a suggestion of something; trace; hint. 5. a slender projection from an object, as a chisel or knife, serving as attachment for a handle, stock, etc. [1300–50; Middle English tange tongue of a snake, projection on a tool] tang2 (tæŋ) n. 1. a sharp ringing or twanging sound; clang. v.t., v.i. 2. to ring or twang; clang. [1550–60; imitative] T'ang or Tang (tɑŋ) n. a dynasty in China, A.D. 618–907, marked by the invention of printing, and the development of the arts. tang - The tongue of a snake.See also related terms for snake.ThesaurusNoun | 1. | tang - a tart spicy quality piquance, piquancy, piquantness, tanginess, zest, nipspicery, spiciness, spice - the property of being seasoned with spice and so highly flavored | | 2. | Tang - the imperial dynasty of China from 618 to 907Tang dynastydynasty - a sequence of powerful leaders in the same family | | 3. | tang - the taste experience when a savoury condiment is taken into the mouthsapidity, savor, savour, smack, flavor, flavour, nip, relishgustatory perception, gustatory sensation, taste, taste perception, taste sensation - the sensation that results when taste buds in the tongue and throat convey information about the chemical composition of a soluble stimulus; "the candy left him with a bad taste"; "the melon had a delicious taste"lemon - a distinctive tart flavor characteristic of lemonsvanilla - a distinctive fragrant flavor characteristic of vanilla beans | | 4. | tang - a common rockweed used in preparing kelp and as manureblack rockweed, bladder fucus, Fucus vesiculosus, bladderwrackrockweed - coarse brown seaweed growing on rocks exposed at low tidegenus Fucus - type genus of the family Fucaceae: cartilaginous brown algae | | 5. | tang - brown algae seaweed with serrated edgesFucus serratus, serrated wrackbrown algae - algae having the chlorophyll masked by brown and yellow pigmentsgenus Fucus - type genus of the family Fucaceae: cartilaginous brown algae | | 6. | tang - any of various coarse seaweedssea tangseaweed - plant growing in the sea, especially marine algae | | 7. | tang - any of various kelps especially of the genus Laminariasea tanglekelp - large brown seaweeds having fluted leathery fronds |
tangnoun1. scent, smell, odour, perfume, fragrance, aroma, reek, redolence She could smell the salty tang of the sea.2. taste, bite, flavour, edge, relish, smack, savour, zest, sharpness, piquancy, spiciness, zestiness Some liked its strong, fruity tang.3. trace, touch, tinge, suggestion, hint, whiff, smattering His criticism seemed to have acquired a tang of friendliness.tangnounA distinctive property of a substance affecting the gustatory sense:flavor, relish, sapor, savor, smack, taste, zest.Translationstang (tӕŋ) noun a strong or sharp taste, flavour or smell. The air had a salty tang. 強烈的味道 强烈的味道tang
tang, common name for certain members of the Acanthuridae, a family of mostly small, mainly reef-dwelling tropical fishes with compressed bodies and small mouths and teeth. Other members of the family are known as surgeonfishes and unicornfishes. They have sharp spines on either side of the tail, and many are brightly colored. The tangs include the blue-gray to dark-brown doctorfish, several species known as blue tangs, and the larger and more abundant ocean tang of deep waters. The unicornfishes are named after the hornlike projection found in some species; the whitemargin unicornfish is among the largest members of the family, reaching 39 in. (1 m) in length. The allied spadefishes, which include the batfishes of the Indo-Pacific region, are generally large than the tangs and belong to the family Ephippidae. They are barred in black and white. The Atlantic spadefish, also called angelfish or white angelfish, is valued both as a food and a game fish. The tangs and spadefishes are classified in the phylum ChordataChordata , phylum of animals having a notochord, or dorsal stiffening rod, as the chief internal skeletal support at some stage of their development. Most chordates are vertebrates (animals with backbones), but the phylum also includes some small marine invertebrate animals. ..... Click the link for more information. , subphylum Vertebrata, class Actinopterygii, order Perciformes, families Acanthuridae and Ephippidae, respectively.T’ang a Chinese imperial dynasty that reigned from 618 to 907. The T’ang Dynasty was founded by Li Yuan. His son, Li Shih-min, united the country in 628, after subduing peasant insurgents and separatist feudal forces. He also strengthened the central authority and improved the organization of the military by instituting the fuping system. During the reigns of the first T’ang emperors, a system of competitive state examinations was developed, which permitted the rise among the feudal class of an estate of scholars loyal to the imperial court; it was from this estate that members of the bureaucracy and the military elite were chosen. The same era saw the establishment of a system of allotment landowning called the equal-field system, which made it possible for the central government to regulate taxation. A growing internal struggle among feudal groups resulted in a palace coup at the end of Emperor Li Chih’s reign (650–683). The emperor’s wife, Wu Tse-t’ien, seized power and ruled the country herself from 684 to 705. Until the middle of the eighth century, the T’ang Dynasty carried out an aggressive foreign policy that led to war and the seizure of neighboring lands. Later, the empire encountered resistance from the states of Nan Chao and T’ufan (Tibet) and the Uighur Khanate. As the power of the dynasty waned in the middle of the eighth century, the power of the military governors (the chieh-tu-shih) increased—to the point where one governor, An Lu-shan, openly revolted. The dynasty’s dominance was ultimately broken by a peasant uprising led by Huang Ch’ao and his successors and by a struggle among various groups of the ruling class. Li Chu (904–907), the last T’ang emperor, was overthrown by the military commander Chu Wen. Earlier, Chu Wen, one of the leaders of the peasant uprising, had betrayed Huang Ch’ao by aligning himself with the emperor. L. I. DUMAN tang[taŋ] (engineering) The part of a file that fits into a handle. The end of a drill shank which allows transmission of torque from the drill press spindle to the body of the drill. tang tang The slender projecting tongue, or prong, forming part of one object that serves to secure it to another, as the projecting tongue on a chisel that secures it to a handle.tang the pointed end of a tool, such as a chisel, file, knife, etc., which is fitted into a handle, shaft, or stock tang
tang (tăng) 1. A strong taste or flavor.2. A long, slender projection or prong forming a part of a chisel, file, or knife.3. In dentistry, an apparatus for joining the rests and retainers to palatal or lingual bars of a denture.TANG
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TANG➣Texas Air National Guard | TANG➣Tennessee Air National Guard | TANG➣Toronto Aviation Noise Group (Toronto, Canada) | TANG➣Transcendental Argument for the Non-existence of God | TANG➣The Angband Newbie Guide | TANG➣Technical Assistance Negotiated Grant (various locations) | TANG➣Towards A Non-Violent Generation (youth group, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada) |
tang Related to tang: Tang dynasty, tangoSynonyms for tangnoun scentSynonyms- scent
- smell
- odour
- perfume
- fragrance
- aroma
- reek
- redolence
noun tasteSynonyms- taste
- bite
- flavour
- edge
- relish
- smack
- savour
- zest
- sharpness
- piquancy
- spiciness
- zestiness
noun traceSynonyms- trace
- touch
- tinge
- suggestion
- hint
- whiff
- smattering
Synonyms for tangnoun a distinctive property of a substance affecting the gustatory senseSynonyms- flavor
- relish
- sapor
- savor
- smack
- taste
- zest
Synonyms for tangnoun a tart spicy qualitySynonyms- piquance
- piquancy
- piquantness
- tanginess
- zest
- nip
Related Wordsnoun the imperial dynasty of China from 618 to 907SynonymsRelated Wordsnoun the taste experience when a savoury condiment is taken into the mouthSynonyms- sapidity
- savor
- savour
- smack
- flavor
- flavour
- nip
- relish
Related Words- gustatory perception
- gustatory sensation
- taste
- taste perception
- taste sensation
- lemon
- vanilla
noun a common rockweed used in preparing kelp and as manureSynonyms- black rockweed
- bladder fucus
- Fucus vesiculosus
- bladderwrack
Related Wordsnoun brown algae seaweed with serrated edgesSynonyms- Fucus serratus
- serrated wrack
Related Wordsnoun any of various coarse seaweedsSynonymsRelated Wordsnoun any of various kelps especially of the genus LaminariaSynonymsRelated Words |