释义 |
sug·ar I. \ˈshu̇gə(r)\ noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English sucre, sugre, suger, from Middle French çucre, sucre, from Medieval Latin zuccarum, succarum, from Old Italian zucchero, from Arabic sukkar, from Persian shakar, from Prakrit sakkara, from Sanskrit śarkarā gravel, grit, sugar; akin to Sanskrit śarkara pebble 1. a. : a sweet crystallizable substance that consists entirely or essentially of sucrose, that is colorless or white when pure and usually yellowish to brown otherwise, that occurs naturally in the most readily available amounts in sugarcane, sugar beet, sugar maple, sorghum, and sugar palms, that is obtained commercially principally by processing the juice expressed from sugarcane or the aqueous extract of sliced sugar beets and refining so that the final product is the same regardless of the source, and that forms an important article of human food and is used also chiefly as a condiment and preservative for other foods and for drugs and in the chemical industry as an intermediate — see beet sugar, brown sugar 1, cane sugar, invert sugar, maple sugar 1, saccharose b. : any of a class of water-soluble compounds (as glucose, fructose, xylose, sucrose, maltose, or raffinose) that vary widely in sweetness, comprise the simpler carbohydrates, include not only the monosaccharides but also the oligosaccharides, may be reducing or nonreducing, and typically are optically active 2. : a unit (as a spoonful, cube, or lump) of sugar < how many sugars in your tea > 3. : sugar bowl < offering sugars, creamers in styles to match — Edison Electric Appliances Cat. > 4. slang : money < undergoing an operation that cost heavy sugar — Mickey Spillane > < spend my good sugar on a taxi — Auckland (New Zealand) Weekly News > 5. — used as an interjection to express annoyance or disappointment II. verb (sugared ; sugared ; sugaring \-g(ə)riŋ\ ; sugars) Etymology: Middle English sugren, from sugre sugar transitive verb 1. : to make pleasing, palatable, or deceptively attractive : sweeten, sugarcoat < novels heavy with moral teaching and sugared with romance — American Guide Series: New York > < sugaring the reproach with the expression of endearment — Vicki Baum > — often used with over or up < with devotion's visage … we do sugar o'er the devil himself — Shakespeare > < his inclination to sugar up reality — David Tilden > 2. : to sprinkle sugar on : mix sugar with : put sugar into < sugar a cake > < sugar the mixture to taste > < sugar tea > intransitive verb 1. : to form sugar < continued stirring will cause a syrup to sugar > 2. : to become granular in texture : granulate < a varnish that sugars > III. adjective Etymology: sugar (I) 1. : made or derived from sugar 2. : having the sweetness of sugar 3. : attracted to sugar 4. : used with sugar or in the making of sugar IV. Usage: usually capitalized — a communications code word for the letter s |