Word Meanings - WEAZENY - Book Publishers vocabulary database
Somewhat weazen; shriveled. "Weazeny, baked pears." Lowell.
Related words: (words related to WEAZENY)
- BAKING
1. The act or process of cooking in an oven, or of drying and hardening by heat or cold. 2. The quantity baked at once; a batch; as, a baking of bread. Baking powder, a substitute for yeast, usually consisting of an acid, a carbonate, and a little - SOMEWHAT
1. More or less; a certain quantity or degree; a part, more or less; something. These salts have somewhat of a nitrous taste. Grew. Somewhat of his good sense will suffer, in this transfusion, and much of the beauty of his thoughts will be lost. - WEAZENY
Somewhat weazen; shriveled. "Weazeny, baked pears." Lowell. - BAKEMEAT; BAKED-MEAT
A pie; baked food. Gen. xl. 17. Shak. - WEAZEN
Thin; sharp; withered; wizened; as, a weazen face. They were weazen and shriveled. Dickens. - BAKISTRE
A baker. Chaucer. - BAKERY
1. The trade of a baker. 2. The place for baking bread; a bakehouse. - BAKEN
p. p. of Bake. - BAKINGLY
In a hot or baking manner. - BAKE
bacan; akin to D. bakken, OHG. bacchan, G. backen, Icel. & Sw. baca, Dan. bage, Gr. 1. To prepare, as food, by cooking in a dry heat, either in an oven or under coals, or on heated stone or metal; as, to bake bread, meat, apples. Note: Baking is - BAKSHEESH; BAKSHISH
See BACKSHEESH - BAKER
1. One whose business it is to bake bread, biscuit, etc. 2. A portable oven in which baking is done. A baker's dozen, thirteen. -- Baker foot, a distorted foot. Jer. Taylor. -- Baker's itch, a rash on the back of the hand, caused - BAKEHOUSE
A house for baking; a bakery. - SHRIVEL
To draw, or be drawn, into wrinkles; to shrink, and form corrugations; as, a leaf shriveles in the hot sun; the skin shrivels with age; -- often with up. (more info) shrink; cf. dial. AS. screpa to pine away, Norw. skrypa to waste, skryp, skryv, - BAKER-LEGGED
Having legs that bend inward at the knees. - HARDBAKE
A sweetmeat of boiled brown sugar or molasses made with almonds, and flavored with orange or lemon juice, etc. Thackeray. - HAWEBAKE
Probably, the baked berry of the hawthorn tree, that is, coarse fare. See 1st Haw, 2. Chaucer. - DOUGH-BAKED
Imperfectly baked; hence, not brought to perfection; unfinished; also, of weak or dull understanding. Halliwell. - CLAMBAKE
The backing or steaming of clams on heated stones, between layers of seaweed; hence, a picnic party, gathered on such an occasion.