ProphetesAI is thinking...
disrelish
Answers
MindMap
Loading...
Sources
disrelish
▪ I. disrelish, n. (dɪsˈrɛlɪʃ) Also 7 disrellish. [f. disrelish v. or dis- 9 + relish n.] Distaste, dislike, aversion, some degree of disgust.a 1625 Fletcher Nice Valour i. i, Being once glutted, then the taste of folly Will come into disrelish. 1645 Fuller Good Th. in Bad T. (1841) 37 Dissensions.....
Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai
David Gogokhia
Jambazi - "Fly Away"
Cool Company - "Slice of Paradise"
2017
BB Thomaz - "Now You Want It"
2018
Hamin Reed - "Disrelish"
2019
Nitepunk - "We Go Back
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
disrelishment
† disˈrelishment Obs. rare. [f. disrelish + -ment.] A disliking; a distasteful matter.1646 S. Bolton Arraignm. Err. 354 An act of oblivion..in which all disrelishments either in language or action, word or deed, may be buried up in silence.
Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai
dispalate
† disˈpalate, v. Obs. rare. [f. dis- 6 + palate v.] trans. To make or find unpalatable, disrelish.1630 R. Brathwait Eng. Gentlem. (1641) 75 His Vocation, which perchance by our nicer and more curious gallants..will be distasted and dispalated.
Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai
John Hobart Caunter
Caunter's representation of a religious heresy, opined: "The story may entertain the lovers of the marvellous, and confirm them more and more in their disrelish
wikipedia.org
en.wikipedia.org
distaste
▪ I. distaste, n. (dɪsˈteɪst) Also 7 distast. [f. dis- 9 + taste n.: prob. as a rendering of It. disgusto, OF. desgoust: see Florio and Cotgrave.] 1. Disrelish or dislike of food or drink; nausea; bad taste in the mouth. Now rare or Obs.1598 Florio, Sgusto, disgust, distast, vnkindnes, dislike. 1614...
Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai
disgust
▪ I. disgust, n. (dɪsˈgʌst) [ad. 16th c. F. desgoust (Paré), mod.F. dégoût; or ad. It. disgusto ‘distaste’ (Florio), f. dis- 4 + gusto taste: cf. disgust v. This and all the cognate words appear after 1600. They are not used by Shakespeare.] 1. Strong distaste or disrelish for food in general, or fo...
Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai
dislike
▪ I. dislike, n. (dɪsˈlaɪk) [f. dislike v.] † 1. Displeasure, disapproval (as directed to some object). (Passing gradually into the mod. sense 2.) to be in dislike with, to be displeased with; so to come or grow into dislike with. Obs.1577 Ld. Buckhurst in Ellis Orig. Lett. Ser. i. II. 272 To hazard...
Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai
純粹的才是美好的: 三月 2007
There are so many sorts of love that one does not know to whom to address oneself for a definition of it. The name of "love" is given boldly to a caprice lasting a few days, a sentiment without esteem, gallants' affectations, a frigid habit, a romantic fantasy, relish followed by prompt disrelish people give this name to a thousand chimeras.
hongtaoh.blogspot.com
slapsauce
† slapsauce Obs. [f. slap v.3 + sauce n.] 1. One who is fond of good eating; a greedy or gluttonous person. Also attrib.1573 Tusser Husb. (1878) 188 At dinner and supper the table doth craue good fellowly neighbour good manner to haue. Aduise thee well therefore, ere tongue be too free, or slapsauce...
Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai
relish
▪ I. relish, n.1 (ˈrɛlɪʃ) Also 6–7 rellish, 7 rellice, rallish. [Later form of reles, with shifting of stress (cf. rellesde s.v. relished) and assimilation of the ending to -ish2.] 1. a. A taste or flavour; the distinctive taste of anything.1530 Palsgr. 261/2 Rellysshe, a sauour, govst. 1594 T. B. L...
Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai
sugared
sugared, ppl. a. (ˈʃʊgəd) Forms: 4–5 sucred; 4–7 sugred (5 -id, -yd, -et, sugird, -urd, sugurt, sugeryd, 6 -ed, Sc. sug(g)urit, sugorit, 7 suger'd, sugg'red, sugr'd, sug'red), 6– sugared (7–8 sugar'd); Sc. 7 succred, 8–9 suckered. [f. sugar n. or v. + -ed. Cf. med.L. zucarata, sugurata (aqua), F. su...
Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai
gorge
▪ I. gorge, n.1 (gɔːdʒ) Also 5 goorge, 5–6 gorg. [a. OF. and F. gorge = Pr. gorga, gorja, Sp. gorga, Pg. gorja, It. gorga, gorgia:—popular L. *gorga, *gurga of unknown origin; the possibility of connexion with L. gurges, whirlpool, is very doubtful.] I. In physical senses. 1. The external throat; th...
Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai
stall
▪ I. stall, n.1 (stɔːl) Forms: 1 steall, steal, stal, 3–7 stal, stalle, 3 steal, 3–4 stel, 4–6 stale, (5 stayle, stawll), 6 staull, stawle, stawyll, 6–7 staule, 7 staul, 6–9 Sc. staw, 3– stall. [Com. Teut. (wanting in Gothic): OE. steall masc. standing, state, place, stall for cattle, corresponds to...
Oxford English Dictionary
prophetes.ai