英:['mɑ:tʃpeɪn]
美:['mɑtʃˌpeɪn]
英:['mɑ:tʃpeɪn]
美:['mɑtʃˌpeɪn]
march·pane
march peIn
Middle French marcepain, from Italian marzapane
The first known use of marchpane was in 1516
1 Sir George sent the venison, sir," said the gaoler, grinning, "and Master Piersey the wild fowl, and Madam West the pasty and the marchpane, and Master Pory the sack.
2 "It's a good thing that you've put so much marchpane on it," he said.
3 He ate heartily and quickly, while the two waited for him and nibbled at marchpane.
4 One day she and I were in the kitchen, watching Mandy make marchpane.
5 In "Romeo and Juliet" one of the servants says: "Good thou, save me a piece of marchpane."
6 Little George, then two and a half years old, had been taken suddenly ill after a supper on marchpane and plum broth, washed down by Christmas ale.
7 To these were added the costly wines of the seventeenth century, Tokay, Canary, Marzenin, Frontignac, Muscat, and finally wine of Lebanon; at dessert there was no longer marchpane, but candied citron, the fashionable delicacy.
8 In Marston's "What you Will" occurs the passage: Now work the cooks, the pastry sweats with slaves, The marchpanes glitter.
9 By way of acknowledging the new connection, the child's father sent the godfather a marchpane, that cake of mystic origin which is still honoured and eaten from Nuremberg to Malaga.
10 Yes, I'm aware of her passion for marchpane.
11 Fines, lost goods, taxes, expenses, loyal charges, salaries, damages, and interests, gehenna, prison, and jail, and fetters with expenses are Christmas spice cake and marchpanes of Saint-John to him!
12 "I haven't a bit of character," she thought, as she bit into the marchpane which the older, the wickeder one, offered her.
13 And only think, last of all came ice-cream doves sitting in a nest made of sugar, upon eggs of marchpane!
14 Among other eccentricities, Murray had taken against “marzipan”, preferring to spell it “marchpane”, and decreed that the adjective “African” should not be included, on the basis that it was not really a word.
15 "A marchpane, that Englishwoman," interrupted Swidwicki; "but her maid has more electricity in her."
16 Eat this slice of marchpane, it will help your digestion; then shall you be presented with a cup of claret hippocras, which is right healthful and stomachal.
17 Wild turkeys, ducks, fish and clams were procured by the colonists and cooked, perhaps with some marchpanes also, by the more expert cooks.
18 She's the young limb o' mischief for whom I ravaged your stores of marchpane.
19 Because, in the first place, it's a matter of proverbial wisdom that stolen marchpane's sweetest.
20 And in Brome's "City Wit" Mrs. Pyannet tells Toby Sneakup: "You have your kickshaws, your players' marchpanes—all show and no meat."
1 杏仁蛋白糊
2 的变体
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4 杏仁蛋白软糖