英:[ˈteɪstə(r)]
美:[ˈtestɚ]
英:[ˈteɪstə(r)]
美:[ˈtestɚ]
tast·er
teI str
复数:tasters
noun
one whose job is to taste food or drink to determine its quality.
any of various containers or utensils used in the tasting process.
formerly, a special servant who was employed to taste the food of a king or other high noble before he or she ate it to determine whether or not the food had been poisoned.
尝味者:能尝出特定试验物质(如苯硫脲)的人(遗传学研究用)
The first known use of taster was in the 14th century
tatternoun
a part torn and left hanging : shred
plural tattered clothing : rags
taxonomynoun
the study of scientific classification
classification sense 2aespecially: orderly classification of living things according to their presumed natural relationships
tatteredadjective
wearing ragged clothes
a tattered barefoot child
torn in shreds : ragged
a tattered flag
tatternoun
a part torn and left hanging : shred
plural tattered clothing : rags
tatverb
to work at or make by tatting
tatverb
to work at or make by tatting
tastyadjective
pleasing to the taste : savory
very attractive or interesting
tastyadjective
pleasing to the taste : savory
very attractive or interesting
tastyadjective
pleasing to the taste : savory
very attractive or interesting
tasternoun
one that tastes: as
a person who has the duty of tasting food or drink prepared for another person especially to test for poison
a person who is able to taste the chemical phenylthiocarbamide
tasternoun
a person able to taste the chemical phenylthiocarbamide
1 Several dozen volunteer tasters at The Post who ranged from apprehensive to concert-line enthusiastic gave the burgers a thumbs up, deeming the meat chewy, somewhat crumbly, extra-meaty and “no mistaking it for beef.”
2 And the overall flavor was slightly yeasty; one taster asked if I used alcohol in the dredge.
3 If that sounds too tough, the winter multi-activity holiday offers a taster of ice-climbing, plus other activities including skiing, sledding and sleeping in an igloo.
4 “I always try and go to the men’s shows as I think often it is a good taster for the women’s shows ahead.”
5 Working in Detroit, Scoville had the bright idea that he could measure a pepper’s hotness by diluting its extract until tasters could no longer detect the burn.
6 Allow my food taster to answer: “I don’t even like breakfast burritos,” she told me, “and I love that.”
7 Compared with trained tasters, ordinary consumers respond in unsystematic, inconsistent ways when asked about what they taste, and whether they like it.
8 In the study, psychologists manipulated the price of wine during a tasting held at the University of Basel in Switzerland, where 140 blind tasters were given three versions of Italian wine.
9 Expert food tasters are taught a very specific vocabulary, which allows them to describe precisely their reactions to specific foods.
10 Food Lab tasters took judicious helpings and did not wax enthusiastic; in truth, some of them might have overheard me going on about the amount of eggs.
11 There was a burst of Childe Harold, and no more than a brief pause at a castle or five, but it was still a pleasant taster of this tiny section of German landscape and history.
12 A literary agent who studied with Chang-Rae Lee at Princeton University and represents acclaimed author Téa Obreht, Fishman had written two unpublished books before finishing a thriller about a poison taster.
13 Silver Spell, the first taster of their forthcoming album, Mirror Mirror, is built around a clomping drum beat, a distant synth murmur and the twin vocals of Adele Bethel and Scott Paterson.
14 “Delivers as promised!” one taster, who hated the Halo Top chocolate ice cream, raved.
15 New single Ringo Starr is meant to serve as a taster of things to come.
16 The team's formula is useful for more than just helping a wine taster "impress his friends, " Reclari says.
这个团队得出的公式不仅可用于让品酒师“打动他的朋友”,莱克拉里说道。
17 Your next book is Roald Dahl’s Taste, a short story about a famous wine taster.
18 Among the tasters were sommeliers, enthusiasts, writers and two authorities, Charles Curtis and Mary Margaret McCamic, who had gone through the rigorous process of earning Master of Wine accreditations.
19 It is very funny and also captures how wine tasters can use language to assert cultural superiority.
20 Professional tasters try to identify primary, secondary and tertiary aromas.