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单词 jelly
释义

jelly1

nounPlural jellies ˈdʒɛliˈdʒɛli
  • 1British mass noun A fruit-flavoured dessert made by warming and then cooling a liquid containing gelatin or a similar setting agent in a mould or dish so that it sets into a semi-solid, somewhat elastic mass.

    as modifier a jelly mould
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Uses are mainly for wine, fruit sauce, jelly, or fresh fruit.
    • The orange jelly, though, was nothing more than a silly fancy on a rainy day.
    • Lunch may be with family or friends, and involve a classic roast followed by, say, fruit jelly made by the kids.
    • The clusters can be frozen whole for jelly or juice.
    • A little dash of pumpkin pie spice in my pumpkin jelly and I was on to another blue ribbon winner.
    • Pour the custard off and just eat the jelly.
    • Adding cooking apples or damsons will ensure a perfect set in jam or jelly because of these fruits' high pectin levels.
    • Products with cooked elderberries, like juice or elderberry jelly, are perfectly safe, however.
    • Tart lemon jelly and crumbly crumbles went very well together, I thought.
    • You can keep this sauce, chilled as a jelly, in the fridge for up to a week.
    • Orange jelly with fresh peach and pineapple slices, topped by double cream, finished the meal.
    • A three-fruit jelly of distinct layers - blackberry, blueberry, raspberry - came with a deliciously intense fruit sauce.
    • For the guava jelly: In a saucepan, bring the guava juice and orange juice to a boil.
    • Using a spoon, spread over the jelly so it covers the bottom crust.
    • They made apple jelly with the apples from the orchard.
    • Antonin selected fruits for the puddings - a nectarine plombie (ice cream) and oranges stuffed with layered jellies.
    • For the apple jelly: In small saucepan, combine juice and ascorbic acid.
    • The second act was a passion fruit jelly in an oyster shell - that was better.
    • Cane and beet sugar are the usual sources of sugar for jelly or jam.
    • And, after disastrous rehearsals, did an exceptional fruit jelly.
    1. 1.1 A clear gelatinous substance made with fruit or other ingredients and eaten with savoury foods as a condiment.
      roast pheasant with redcurrant jelly
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The treatment back then was a diet of fried sheep thyroid glands with currant jelly on the side.
      • I set a jar of mayo and a jar of red jelly in front of him.
      • In Houston, a large jar of fruit jelly, which has a density similar to some explosives, triggered the alarm on a machine that scans checked luggage.
      • I liked the kick it gave the chicken and the green grape jelly was a great balance.
      • I also got extra points for using homemade blackberry jelly so graciously offered by a coworker.
      • Nearly two-thirds of all restaurant visits include French fries, pepperoni, potato salad or jelly filling.
      • It came with a red pepper cassonade, crab ice cream and a sliver of passion fruit jelly.
      • Mrs Von Trapp had the chicken liver parfait with green grape jelly.
      • She said that he was hopeless - living on peanut butter and jelly sandwiches.
      • Nick peeked into the first basket, and passed me an apple jelly sandwich before taking a peanut butter one.
      • Add the mustard powder, red currant jelly, and white wine.
      • For example, the process of creating jelly or jam from fruit was similar to pickling.
      • In a bowl, mix together the lamb with the fresh mint or mint jelly.
      • "Oh, the jelly doughnuts, " he nodded knowingly.
      • Spread the top of the layer with a generous 1/2 cup of the fruit jelly.
      • Mine was filled with apricot and Jason's was peanut butter and strawberry jelly.
      • She went into the kitchen, and prepared a peanut butter and jelly sandwich.
      • In this country port was as essential as redcurrant jelly, the two being combined in Francatelli's delicious sauce for venison.
      • All jams, jellies, and pickled products processed less than 10 minutes should be filled into sterile empty jars.
      • They can be quite tart, so are perfect for making sweet jams, jellies and ice cream.
    2. 1.2North American A type of clear gelatinous jam.
    3. 1.3 A savoury preparation with a gelatinous consistency made by boiling meat and bones.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • She stuffed another bite of pot roast with jelly into her mouth and watched for the vamp's reaction.
      • Slow cooked, the sinew that makes meat tough becomes jelly.
      • In the kitchen, things which may need clarification are stock, clear soup, aspic, jelly, etc.
      • The statement also said the latest cases were likely caused by the consumption of tainted pork tongue in jelly.
      • Similarly, the chicken wings come in Thai jelly, a sticky slick of savoury honey coating some very ruddy wings.
      • It tasted like eating a hunk of quivering meat jelly.
      • Put in the pulled breast, with any odd scraps of jelly, and stir about until the pieces are very hot indeed.
      • You would realize that too if you had to live on German jelly and bean stew for six months.
      • After preparation, the jelly was placed in a container and covered from dust, often not sealed in any way.
      • There's hardly a bit of a pig you can't eat, from the head boiled up in a stewy soup to the trotters with their savoury jelly and morsels of meat.
      • Sheep heads, rams' testicles, udders and jelly from the feet were all prepared for storage.
      • Those who wanted to build up the appetite, began by munching on seafood popiyat and meat jelly.
    4. 1.4 Any substance of a gelatinous consistency.
      petroleum jelly
      Example sentencesExamples
      • HIV positive women can use diaphragms and cervical caps for birth control, with spermicidal cream or jelly.
      • They make royal jelly in glands near their mouthparts.
      • Don't use petroleum jelly or a lit match to kill a tick.
      • Use petroleum jelly on the rim of the cup for a tight fit.
      • They are caused by clumps of material suspended in the vitreous jelly that fills the back of the eye.
      • Triad Disposables' hot new item - tubes of sterile lubricating jelly.
      • In either case you belong in the ‘Land of Misfit Toys’ with the choo choo train with square wheels and the water pistol that squirts jelly.
      • Her bones were melting like jelly now, descending along the edges ever so patiently, dripping slow as wax over her raw flesh.
      • As the Committee chairman testily remarked, this is a little like nailing jelly.
      • It is petroleum oil turned to jelly, and contains refined oil, gelliants, and butylated hydroxy toluene.
      • When this was done it formed a jelly like substance.
      • After peeling off outer skin, they polish it with castor oil, cactus jelly, curd, ghee and turmeric powder to make it smooth and slippery.
      • Spermicide comes as a foam, jelly, or cream, and kills sperm.
      • I don't like the idea of using petroleum jelly or any other synthetic product internally.
      • A sea-urchin egg is surrounded by a protective covering known as the vitelline envelope, which in turn is covered with a thick coat of jelly.
      • For the soy jelly: In small saucepan, combine soy sauce and water and bring to a boil.
      • The cleared cuticles were mounted in glycerin jelly on glass slides for light microscopic examination.
      • Another thing that just wouldn't be the same without women is jelly wrestling.
  • 2A small sweet made with gelatin.

    a box of fruit jellies
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Served on a long white platter, the little row of apple treats starts with a pleasant apple jelly candy.
    • It is entirely possible that the jelly sweet stuck to his finger while he wet his finger to shine the ball.
    • The jelly is contained in a dome-shaped plastic cup with a peel off foil lid.
    • The jelly sweets contain E425 Konjac - a banned additive that could present a choking hazard to children.
    • The child choked while eating a jelly sweet.
    • The Blackburn-based company has bought the soft fruit jellies business of Penguin Confectionery in a £428,000 deal.
    • I've only just discovered how delicious jelly babies are here in the UK.
    • What he dined on was hard to say: a chocolate-covered row of scallops, perhaps, or tuna tartare topped with a tuile of crispy green-tea jelly.
    • Invert the jelly onto a cutting board and remove the mold and plastic wrap.
    • These elegant jellies look fantastically decadent at the end of a picnic.
    • If they tried to clear my arteries, they'd find one filled with vanilla cream, one filled with jelly, and one dusted with powdered sugar.
    • Undercover council officers are to swoop on local shops in a bid to keep a killer jelly sweet out of Bolton.
    • A toddler is believed to have choked to death on a jelly sweet linked to more than a dozen deaths around the world.
    • These gentlemen want to sell us fruit, custard and jelly but they have no water.
    • Parents were warned not to allow their children to eat a jelly sweet which has been linked to 16 deaths elsewhere in the world.
    • Up close he looks like a child who has just eaten too much jelly at a birthday party.
    • At the market, Wang Lung buys pork, lotus leaf, beef, beancurd, jelly, and at the candle shop, he buys a pair of incense sticks.
    • However, some people eat jellies, which are considered a delicacy.
    1. 2.1British informal A tablet of the drug Temazepam.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Junkies die by injecting jellies into a vein, and they take it regularly as a come down from ecstasy or heroin.
      • There, it was speed and ecstasy, followed by Valium and jellies to come down.
  • 3British informal mass noun Gelignite.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • But another reason for the raid was to test the use of Napon fire bombs containing a gasoline-based jelly.
    • He later combined nitroglycerine with gun cotton to create a clear jelly, patented in 1867 as Blasting Gelatin.
  • 4jelliesJelly shoes.

verbjellies, jellied, jellying ˈdʒɛliˈdʒɛli
[with object]usually as adjective jellied
  • Set (food) as or in a jelly.

    jellied cranberry sauce
    jellied eels
    Example sentencesExamples
    • We make great jellied salads, and we're okay with calling them ‘salads’ even though there isn't one lick of lettuce in them.
    • Skim off the fat and spoon out the now jellied stock into tubs and freeze until ready to use.
    • I bet the only people who were glad that they got the game on pay-per-view reside in East London and have a penchant for jellied eels.
    • Filling is minced meat with a cube of jellied broth.
    • Preserves are made of small, whole fruits or uniform-size pieces of fruits in a clear thick, slightly jellied syrup.
    • He's more East End than a Limehouse jellied eel in a pearly king's whistle.
    • I started to sprinkle the pudding with some jellied candies, and happily hummed a song as I went about doing it.
    • I know you like chocolates, but last year we took some chocolate candy and some of those strange jellied candies in little cups out to the orphanage.
    • There were jellied eels galore being passed round Roots Hall on Tuesday night as Southend reached the LDV Vans Final.
    • His meals consist of Marmite sandwiches, Jublees, and jellied eels.
    • Getting funding, however, is more slippery than jellied eel in a pie and mash shop.
    • So I piled Darren and Rob into the car and we headed down to Margate for some whelks and jellied eels.
    • Anyhoo, what I'm trying to get across is that this mag is harder to get hold of than a jellied eel.
    • Before Wright arrived, the forward line worked around Alan Smith, an unflashy 20-a-season man, a player as traditional as jellied eels.
    • In a blender purée one 10-ounce package frozen strawberries and one can of jellied cranberry sauce.
    • Holiday foods included jellied pigs feet, goose stuffed with prunes, and roasted suckling pig.
    • All the traditional English fare will be on offer during the day, such as roast beef, cockles and jellied eels, fish and chips, candy floss and popcorn.
    • His eyes were yellow, jellied, and looked like they were filled with mucus.
    • In Sweden it commonly includes herring, smoked eel, roast beef, tongue, jellied fish, boiled potatoes, and cheese.
    • Over the putts, his backswing would become as long and wobbly as a jellied eel.
    Synonyms
    conserve, bottle, tin, can, pot, chill, freeze, freeze-dry, quick-freeze, dry, desiccate, dehydrate

Derivatives

  • jellification

  • noun
  • jellify

  • verbjellifies, jellifying, jellified ˈdʒɛlɪfʌɪˈdʒɛləˌfaɪ
    [no object]
    • Become or make into jelly.

      the thick stock will cool and jellify
      Example sentencesExamples
      • a sort of jellified custard
      • Then dribble over a little warmed thick stock or aspic which will cool and jellify.
      • And two of the individual tales, though hardly jellifying, are sufficiently well crafted to be memorably eerie.
      • This year, it seems, Adrià has become obsessed with jellifying ingredients, and with the sensuality of food.
  • jelly-like

  • adjective
    • Since the external appearance was clear, viscous, and jelly-like, this can be attributed to the presence of a cubic phase.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • These are rod-like ‘power plants’ in the jelly-like body of the cell that supply energy.
      • Gradually, the layer of sand at the bottom began to disappear, and the water became a thick, jelly-like substance.
      • Some type of unidentified green liquid is added to the mix, turning the liquid tofu into a jelly-like substance after several minutes.
      • Despite earlier reports, he says none of the toxic, jelly-like cargo escaped from the container it was being transported in.

Origin

Late Middle English: from Old French gelee 'frost, jelly', from Latin gelata 'frozen', from gelare 'freeze', from gelu 'frost'.

  • In the Middle Ages jelly was a savoury dish of meat or fish set in a mould of aspic. The first references to fruit-flavoured jellies are not found until the late 18th century. The word comes ultimately from the Latin word gelare ‘to freeze’. See also cold

Rhymes

belly, Botticelli, casus belli, Corelli, Delhi, deli, Ellie, Grappelli, Kelly, lamellae, Machiavelli, Mahaweli, Schiaparelli, Shelley, shelly, smelly, tagliatelle, telly, Torricelli, vermicelli, welly, Zeffirelli

jelly2

adjective ˈdʒɛliˈdʒɛli
US informal
  • Jealous.

    I'm so jelly that you were at the show
    trust me, you're gonna be jelly

Origin

Early 21st century: abbreviation of jealous.

 
 

jelly1

nounˈjelēˈdʒɛli
  • 1A sweet, clear, semisolid spread or preserve made from fruit juice and sugar boiled to a thick consistency.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The second act was a passion fruit jelly in an oyster shell - that was better.
    • They made apple jelly with the apples from the orchard.
    • For the apple jelly: In small saucepan, combine juice and ascorbic acid.
    • Products with cooked elderberries, like juice or elderberry jelly, are perfectly safe, however.
    • A three-fruit jelly of distinct layers - blackberry, blueberry, raspberry - came with a deliciously intense fruit sauce.
    • And, after disastrous rehearsals, did an exceptional fruit jelly.
    • Using a spoon, spread over the jelly so it covers the bottom crust.
    • Pour the custard off and just eat the jelly.
    • The clusters can be frozen whole for jelly or juice.
    • Cane and beet sugar are the usual sources of sugar for jelly or jam.
    • Antonin selected fruits for the puddings - a nectarine plombie (ice cream) and oranges stuffed with layered jellies.
    • You can keep this sauce, chilled as a jelly, in the fridge for up to a week.
    • For the guava jelly: In a saucepan, bring the guava juice and orange juice to a boil.
    • Uses are mainly for wine, fruit sauce, jelly, or fresh fruit.
    • Lunch may be with family or friends, and involve a classic roast followed by, say, fruit jelly made by the kids.
    • A little dash of pumpkin pie spice in my pumpkin jelly and I was on to another blue ribbon winner.
    • Orange jelly with fresh peach and pineapple slices, topped by double cream, finished the meal.
    • The orange jelly, though, was nothing more than a silly fancy on a rainy day.
    • Tart lemon jelly and crumbly crumbles went very well together, I thought.
    • Adding cooking apples or damsons will ensure a perfect set in jam or jelly because of these fruits' high pectin levels.
    1. 1.1 A clear gelatinous substance made with fruit or other ingredients and eaten with savory foods as a condiment.
      roast duck with jalapeño jelly
      Example sentencesExamples
      • It came with a red pepper cassonade, crab ice cream and a sliver of passion fruit jelly.
      • In this country port was as essential as redcurrant jelly, the two being combined in Francatelli's delicious sauce for venison.
      • Mine was filled with apricot and Jason's was peanut butter and strawberry jelly.
      • In Houston, a large jar of fruit jelly, which has a density similar to some explosives, triggered the alarm on a machine that scans checked luggage.
      • "Oh, the jelly doughnuts, " he nodded knowingly.
      • In a bowl, mix together the lamb with the fresh mint or mint jelly.
      • I set a jar of mayo and a jar of red jelly in front of him.
      • I liked the kick it gave the chicken and the green grape jelly was a great balance.
      • Nick peeked into the first basket, and passed me an apple jelly sandwich before taking a peanut butter one.
      • Nearly two-thirds of all restaurant visits include French fries, pepperoni, potato salad or jelly filling.
      • I also got extra points for using homemade blackberry jelly so graciously offered by a coworker.
      • She went into the kitchen, and prepared a peanut butter and jelly sandwich.
      • Mrs Von Trapp had the chicken liver parfait with green grape jelly.
      • They can be quite tart, so are perfect for making sweet jams, jellies and ice cream.
      • For example, the process of creating jelly or jam from fruit was similar to pickling.
      • All jams, jellies, and pickled products processed less than 10 minutes should be filled into sterile empty jars.
      • The treatment back then was a diet of fried sheep thyroid glands with currant jelly on the side.
      • Spread the top of the layer with a generous 1/2 cup of the fruit jelly.
      • Add the mustard powder, red currant jelly, and white wine.
      • She said that he was hopeless - living on peanut butter and jelly sandwiches.
    2. 1.2British A sweet, fruit-flavored gelatin dessert.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • These gentlemen want to sell us fruit, custard and jelly but they have no water.
      • Invert the jelly onto a cutting board and remove the mold and plastic wrap.
      • At the market, Wang Lung buys pork, lotus leaf, beef, beancurd, jelly, and at the candle shop, he buys a pair of incense sticks.
      • These elegant jellies look fantastically decadent at the end of a picnic.
      • It is entirely possible that the jelly sweet stuck to his finger while he wet his finger to shine the ball.
      • I've only just discovered how delicious jelly babies are here in the UK.
      • Served on a long white platter, the little row of apple treats starts with a pleasant apple jelly candy.
      • Undercover council officers are to swoop on local shops in a bid to keep a killer jelly sweet out of Bolton.
      • The child choked while eating a jelly sweet.
      • A toddler is believed to have choked to death on a jelly sweet linked to more than a dozen deaths around the world.
      • If they tried to clear my arteries, they'd find one filled with vanilla cream, one filled with jelly, and one dusted with powdered sugar.
      • What he dined on was hard to say: a chocolate-covered row of scallops, perhaps, or tuna tartare topped with a tuile of crispy green-tea jelly.
      • Up close he looks like a child who has just eaten too much jelly at a birthday party.
      • The jelly sweets contain E425 Konjac - a banned additive that could present a choking hazard to children.
      • The Blackburn-based company has bought the soft fruit jellies business of Penguin Confectionery in a £428,000 deal.
      • Parents were warned not to allow their children to eat a jelly sweet which has been linked to 16 deaths elsewhere in the world.
      • The jelly is contained in a dome-shaped plastic cup with a peel off foil lid.
      • However, some people eat jellies, which are considered a delicacy.
    3. 1.3 A gelatinous savory preparation made by boiling meat and bones.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • You would realize that too if you had to live on German jelly and bean stew for six months.
      • Similarly, the chicken wings come in Thai jelly, a sticky slick of savoury honey coating some very ruddy wings.
      • Sheep heads, rams' testicles, udders and jelly from the feet were all prepared for storage.
      • Put in the pulled breast, with any odd scraps of jelly, and stir about until the pieces are very hot indeed.
      • It tasted like eating a hunk of quivering meat jelly.
      • In the kitchen, things which may need clarification are stock, clear soup, aspic, jelly, etc.
      • Those who wanted to build up the appetite, began by munching on seafood popiyat and meat jelly.
      • She stuffed another bite of pot roast with jelly into her mouth and watched for the vamp's reaction.
      • After preparation, the jelly was placed in a container and covered from dust, often not sealed in any way.
      • The statement also said the latest cases were likely caused by the consumption of tainted pork tongue in jelly.
      • Slow cooked, the sinew that makes meat tough becomes jelly.
      • There's hardly a bit of a pig you can't eat, from the head boiled up in a stewy soup to the trotters with their savoury jelly and morsels of meat.
    4. 1.4 Any substance of a gelatinous consistency.
      spermicidal jellies
      frogs lay eggs coated in jelly
      Example sentencesExamples
      • When this was done it formed a jelly like substance.
      • They are caused by clumps of material suspended in the vitreous jelly that fills the back of the eye.
      • Another thing that just wouldn't be the same without women is jelly wrestling.
      • In either case you belong in the ‘Land of Misfit Toys’ with the choo choo train with square wheels and the water pistol that squirts jelly.
      • I don't like the idea of using petroleum jelly or any other synthetic product internally.
      • Triad Disposables' hot new item - tubes of sterile lubricating jelly.
      • They make royal jelly in glands near their mouthparts.
      • HIV positive women can use diaphragms and cervical caps for birth control, with spermicidal cream or jelly.
      • Use petroleum jelly on the rim of the cup for a tight fit.
      • Her bones were melting like jelly now, descending along the edges ever so patiently, dripping slow as wax over her raw flesh.
      • It is petroleum oil turned to jelly, and contains refined oil, gelliants, and butylated hydroxy toluene.
      • After peeling off outer skin, they polish it with castor oil, cactus jelly, curd, ghee and turmeric powder to make it smooth and slippery.
      • A sea-urchin egg is surrounded by a protective covering known as the vitelline envelope, which in turn is covered with a thick coat of jelly.
      • Spermicide comes as a foam, jelly, or cream, and kills sperm.
      • For the soy jelly: In small saucepan, combine soy sauce and water and bring to a boil.
      • As the Committee chairman testily remarked, this is a little like nailing jelly.
      • The cleared cuticles were mounted in glycerin jelly on glass slides for light microscopic examination.
      • Don't use petroleum jelly or a lit match to kill a tick.
  • 2jelliesJelly shoes.

verbˈjelēˈdʒɛli
[with object]usually as adjective jellied
  • Set (food) as or in a jelly.

    jellied cranberry sauce
    jellied eels
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Before Wright arrived, the forward line worked around Alan Smith, an unflashy 20-a-season man, a player as traditional as jellied eels.
    • Filling is minced meat with a cube of jellied broth.
    • He's more East End than a Limehouse jellied eel in a pearly king's whistle.
    • We make great jellied salads, and we're okay with calling them ‘salads’ even though there isn't one lick of lettuce in them.
    • There were jellied eels galore being passed round Roots Hall on Tuesday night as Southend reached the LDV Vans Final.
    • I know you like chocolates, but last year we took some chocolate candy and some of those strange jellied candies in little cups out to the orphanage.
    • Skim off the fat and spoon out the now jellied stock into tubs and freeze until ready to use.
    • In a blender purée one 10-ounce package frozen strawberries and one can of jellied cranberry sauce.
    • So I piled Darren and Rob into the car and we headed down to Margate for some whelks and jellied eels.
    • Over the putts, his backswing would become as long and wobbly as a jellied eel.
    • Getting funding, however, is more slippery than jellied eel in a pie and mash shop.
    • His meals consist of Marmite sandwiches, Jublees, and jellied eels.
    • I bet the only people who were glad that they got the game on pay-per-view reside in East London and have a penchant for jellied eels.
    • All the traditional English fare will be on offer during the day, such as roast beef, cockles and jellied eels, fish and chips, candy floss and popcorn.
    • Anyhoo, what I'm trying to get across is that this mag is harder to get hold of than a jellied eel.
    • Holiday foods included jellied pigs feet, goose stuffed with prunes, and roasted suckling pig.
    • His eyes were yellow, jellied, and looked like they were filled with mucus.
    • Preserves are made of small, whole fruits or uniform-size pieces of fruits in a clear thick, slightly jellied syrup.
    • In Sweden it commonly includes herring, smoked eel, roast beef, tongue, jellied fish, boiled potatoes, and cheese.
    • I started to sprinkle the pudding with some jellied candies, and happily hummed a song as I went about doing it.
    Synonyms
    conserve, bottle, tin, can, pot, chill, freeze, freeze-dry, quick-freeze, dry, desiccate, dehydrate

Origin

Late Middle English: from Old French gelee ‘frost, jelly’, from Latin gelata ‘frozen’, from gelare ‘freeze’, from gelu ‘frost’.

jelly2

adjectiveˈdʒɛliˈjelē
US informal
  • Jealous.

    I'm so jelly that you were at the show
    trust me, you're gonna be jelly

Origin

Early 21st century: abbreviation of jealous.

 
 
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