释义 |
curry
cur·ry 1 C0816200 (kûr′ē, kŭr′ē)tr.v. cur·ried, cur·ry·ing, cur·ries 1. To groom (a horse) with a currycomb.2. To prepare (tanned hides) for use, as by soaking or coloring.Idiom: curry favor To seek or gain favor by fawning or flattery. [Middle English curreien, from Anglo-Norman curreier, to arrange, curry, from Vulgar Latin *conrēdāre : Latin com-, com- + Vulgar Latin *-rēdāre, to make ready (of Germanic origin; see reidh- in Indo-European roots). Curry favor, by folk etymology from Middle English currayen favel, from Old French correier fauvel, to curry a fallow-colored horse, be hypocritical (from the fallow horse as a medieval symbol of deceit).]
cur·ry 2 also cur·rie C0816200 (kûr′ē, kŭr′ē)n. pl. cur·ries 1. A sauce or relish typically made with cumin, coriander, turmeric, and other spices.2. A dish seasoned with curry.3. Curry powder.tr.v. cur·ried, cur·ry·ing, cur·ries To season (food) with curry. [Tamil kaṟi.]curry (ˈkʌrɪ) n, pl -ries1. (Cookery) a spicy dish of oriental, esp Indian, origin that is made in many ways but usually consists of meat or fish prepared in a hot piquant sauce2. (Cookery) curry seasoning or sauce3. give someone curry slang Austral to assault (a person) verbally or physicallyvb, -ries, -rying or -ried (Cookery) (tr) to prepare (food) with curry powder or sauce[C16: from Tamil kari sauce, relish]
curry (ˈkʌrɪ) vb (tr) , -ries, -rying or -ried1. to beat vigorously, as in order to clean2. (Tanning) to dress and finish (leather) after it has been tanned to make it strong, flexible, and waterproof3. (Horse Training, Riding & Manège) to groom (a horse)4. curry favour to ingratiate oneself, esp with superiors[C13: from Old French correer to make ready, from Vulgar Latin conrēdāre (unattested), from rēdāre (unattested) to provide, of Germanic origin]
Curry (ˈkʌrɪ) n (Biography) John (Anthony). 1949–94, British ice skater: won the figure-skating gold medal in the 1976 Olympic Gamescur•ry1 (ˈkɜr i, ˈkʌr i) n., pl. -ries, n. 1. a pungent dish of meat, fish, or vegetables cooked in a sauce with curry powder. 2. curry powder. 3. a sauce containing curry powder. v.t. 4. to cook or flavor (food) with curry powder. [1590–1600; < Tamil kaṟi sauce] cur•ry2 (ˈkɜr i, ˈkʌr i) v.t. -ried, -ry•ing. 1. to rub and clean (a horse) with a currycomb. 2. to dress (tanned hides) by soaking, beating, coloring, etc. 3. to beat; thrash. Idioms: curry favor, to seek to advance oneself through flattery or fawning. [1250–1300; Middle English cor(r)ayen, cor(r)eyen < Anglo-French curreier] Cur•ry (ˈkɜr i, ˈkʌr i) n. John Steuart, 1897–1946, U.S. painter. curry Past participle: curried Gerund: currying
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I curry | you curry | he/she/it curries | we curry | you curry | they curry |
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I curried | you curried | he/she/it curried | we curried | you curried | they curried |
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I am currying | you are currying | he/she/it is currying | we are currying | you are currying | they are currying |
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I have curried | you have curried | he/she/it has curried | we have curried | you have curried | they have curried |
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I was currying | you were currying | he/she/it was currying | we were currying | you were currying | they were currying |
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I had curried | you had curried | he/she/it had curried | we had curried | you had curried | they had curried |
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I will curry | you will curry | he/she/it will curry | we will curry | you will curry | they will curry |
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I will have curried | you will have curried | he/she/it will have curried | we will have curried | you will have curried | they will have curried |
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I will be currying | you will be currying | he/she/it will be currying | we will be currying | you will be currying | they will be currying |
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I have been currying | you have been currying | he/she/it has been currying | we have been currying | you have been currying | they have been currying |
Future Perfect Continuous |
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I will have been currying | you will have been currying | he/she/it will have been currying | we will have been currying | you will have been currying | they will have been currying |
Past Perfect Continuous |
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I had been currying | you had been currying | he/she/it had been currying | we had been currying | you had been currying | they had been currying |
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I would curry | you would curry | he/she/it would curry | we would curry | you would curry | they would curry |
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I would have curried | you would have curried | he/she/it would have curried | we would have curried | you would have curried | they would have curried | ThesaurusNoun | 1. | curry - (East Indian cookery) a pungent dish of vegetables or meats flavored with curry powder and usually eaten with ricecookery, cooking, preparation - the act of preparing something (as food) by the application of heat; "cooking can be a great art"; "people are needed who have experience in cookery"; "he left the preparation of meals to his wife"dish - a particular item of prepared food; "she prepared a special dish for dinner"lamb curry - curry made with lambEast India, East Indies, Malay Archipelago - a group of islands in the Indian and Pacific Oceans between Asia and Australia | Verb | 1. | curry - season with a mixture of spices; typical of Indian cookingcookery, cooking, preparation - the act of preparing something (as food) by the application of heat; "cooking can be a great art"; "people are needed who have experience in cookery"; "he left the preparation of meals to his wife"flavor, flavour, season - lend flavor to; "Season the chicken breast after roasting it" | | 2. | curry - treat by incorporating fat; "curry tanned leather"process, treat - subject to a process or treatment, with the aim of readying for some purpose, improving, or remedying a condition; "process cheese"; "process hair"; "treat the water so it can be drunk"; "treat the lawn with chemicals" ; "treat an oil spill" | | 3. | curry - give a neat appearance to; "groom the dogs"; "dress the horses"groom, dresscoiffe, coiffure, coif, arrange, do, dress, set - arrange attractively; "dress my hair for the wedding"beautify, fancify, prettify, embellish - make more beautiful |
curryTypes of curry achari, balti, biryani, bhoona or bhuna, chasni, dhal, dhansak, dopiaza, green thai, jalfrezi, jaipuri, karahi, kofta, korma, madras, masala, mussalman, nentara, pasanda, pathia, phal, red thai, rogan josh, tandoori, tikka, vindalooTranslationscurry1 (ˈkari) , ((American) ˈkə:ri) – plural ˈcurries – noun (an originally Indian dish of) meat, vegetables etc cooked with spices. chicken curry. 咖哩飯菜 咖哩食品 verb to cook in this way. Are you going to curry this meat? 加咖哩煮 加咖哩调味ˈcurried adjectivecurried chicken. 用咖哩煮的 用咖哩烧的curry powder a selection of spices ground together and used in making a curry. 咖哩粉 咖哩粉
curry2 (ˈkari) , ((American) ˈkə:ri) verb to rub down or comb and clean (a horse). 梳理(馬匹等) 梳刷(马匹等) curry favour (with with) to seek (a) favour by flattery. She's currying favour with the boss. 奉承,拍(某人)馬屁 拍(某人)马屁 curry
give (someone) (a bit of) curryTo berate, rebuke, or criticize (someone); to verbally or physically harass or assault (someone). A reference to the spiciness of curry, that is, making it "hot" for someone. Primarily heard in Australia. Protesters gave the defendant a bit of curry as he left the courtroom in the evening. Don't be afraid to give curry back when you are being pushed around. The wife gave me curry when I showed up late.See also: bit, curry, givecurry favorTo ingratiate oneself to someone Flattery won't work; the only way of currying favor with him is through hard work.See also: curry, favorcurry favor with (one)To ingratiate oneself to someone Flattery won't work; the only way of currying favor with him is through hard work.See also: curry, favorcurry favor with someoneto try to win favor from someone. The lawyer tried to curry favor with the judge. It's silly to curry favor with the boss. Just act yourself.See also: curry, favorcurry favorSeek gain or advancement by fawning or flattery, as in Edith was famous for currying favor with her teachers. This expression originally came from the Old French estriller fauvel, "curry the fallow horse," a beast that in a 14th-century allegory stood for duplicity and cunning. It came into English about 1400 as curry favel-that is, curry (groom with a currycomb) the animal-and in the 1500s became the present term. See also: curry, favorcurry favour ingratiate yourself with someone through obsequious behaviour. Curry here means ‘groom a horse or other animal’ with a coarse brush or comb. The phrase is an early 16th-century alteration of the Middle English curry favel , Favel (or Fauvel ) being the name of a chestnut horse in an early 14th-century French romance who epitomized cunning and duplicity. From this ‘to groom Favel’ came to mean to use on him the cunning which he personified. It is unclear whether the bad reputation of chestnut horses existed before the French romance, but the idea is also found in 15th-century German in the phrase den fahlen hengst reiten (ride the chestnut horse) meaning ‘behave deceitfully’.See also: curry, favourcurry ˈfavour (with somebody) (British English) (American English curry ˈfavor (with somebody)) (disapproving) try to get somebody to like or support you by praising or helping them a lot: They have lowered taxes in an attempt to curry favour with the voters. Curry in this phrase means to groom (= clean and comb) a horse. The phrase was originally ‘curry favel’ (= a light brown horse that was thought to be clever and dishonest) and came to mean to try to please somebody who might be useful to you, especially by doing or saying things that you do not mean or believe.See also: curry, favour curry favor To seek or gain favor by fawning or flattery.See also: curry, favorcurry favor, toTo flatter insincerely in order to get ahead. The term, which has been known since the sixteenth century, comes from a fourteenth-century satirical romance about a horse named Fauvel. This horse was a symbol of cunning bestiality, and to curry (groom) it meant that one was enlisting its services of duplicity and other nasty traits. The English version of Fauvel at first was favel, which by the sixteenth century had been corrupted into “favor.”See also: currycurry favorTo ingratiate oneself through flattery or a willingness to please. “Curry” has nothing to do with the spice—it means to groom, as in the horse-keeping currycomb tool. One of the definitions of “stroke” is “suck up to,” and the image is similar—to get on a person's good side, whether or not flattery is warranted. “Favor” was originally “Fauvel,” the donkey who was the rogue hero of a 14th-century French romance. The image of grooming the beast to get on its good side or to win its favor is now the modern use of the word in the phrase.See also: curry, favorcurry
curry [Malayalam], condiment much used in India and elsewhere in Asia and the Middle East, in combination with rice, meat, and a variety of other dishes. It is compounded of such spices as turmeric, fenugreek, cloves, cumin, ginger, black and hot red pepper, and coriander. When the pungent leaf of an Indian tree of the rue family is included, the curry powder is used not only as a stimulating flavor, but also for medicinal purposes. Curry paste is made from the slightly acid, jellylike pulp of the tamarind pod, combined with a variety of spices. Bibliography See study by L. Collingham (2006). curry[′kər·ē] (food engineering) A mixture of plant spices including turmeric, coriander, cinnamon, cumin, ginger, cardamon, cayenne pepper, cloves, and nutmeg. CURRY
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CURRY➣Current Reconstruction and Imaging (localization of brain activity using EEG or MEG and medical MR images; Neurosoft, Inc.) |
curry Related to curry: curry powderSynonyms for currynoun (East Indian cookery) a pungent dish of vegetables or meats flavored with curry powder and usually eaten with riceRelated Words- cookery
- cooking
- preparation
- dish
- lamb curry
- East India
- East Indies
- Malay Archipelago
verb season with a mixture of spicesRelated Words- cookery
- cooking
- preparation
- flavor
- flavour
- season
verb treat by incorporating fatRelated Wordsverb give a neat appearance toSynonymsRelated Words- coiffe
- coiffure
- coif
- arrange
- do
- dress
- set
- beautify
- fancify
- prettify
- embellish
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