释义 |
blancmange /bləˈmɒnʒ / /bləˈmɑːnʒ/noun BritishA sweet opaque gelatinous dessert made with flavoured cornflour and milk: a good old-fashioned blancmange [mass noun]: a double helping of pink blancmange...- May I have some more of the pink blancmange please?
- It was the day of her wedding and she had been shaking like a blancmange since the moment she woke up.
- I had a sudden appetite for jelly and blancmange, you see.
OriginLate Middle English blancmanger: from Old French blanc mangier, from blanc 'white' + mangier 'eat' (used as a noun to mean 'food'). The shortened form without -er arose in the 18th century. In medieval times a blancmange was a dish of white meat or fish in a cream sauce—the ‘dessert’ sense seems to have come into use in the middle of the 16th century. The word is from Old French blanc mangier and literally means ‘white food’. Other words from French blanc include blanch (Middle English), blank (Middle English), and blanket (Middle English). Originally blanket referred to undyed (hence ‘white’) woollen cloth used for clothing. A dampened blanket would sometimes be used to extinguish a fire before going to bed. This is the origin of a wet blanket, a term for someone who spoils other people's fun by refusing to join in or by showing disapproval.
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