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taste
[ teyst ]
verb (used with object)
- to try or test the flavor or quality of (something) by taking some into the mouth:
to taste food.
Synonyms: savor
- to eat or drink a little of:
She barely tasted her dinner.
- to eat or drink (often used in negative constructions):
He hadn't tasted food for three days.
- to perceive or distinguish the flavor of:
to taste the wine in a sauce.
- to have or get experience, especially a slight experience:
these young men who had only begun to taste life.
- to perceive in any way.
- Archaic. to enjoy or appreciate.
- Obsolete.
- to examine by touch; feel.
- to test or try.
verb (used without object)
- to try the flavor or quality of something.
- to eat or drink a little (usually followed by of ):
She tasted of the cake.
- to perceive or distinguish the flavor of anything.
- to have experience of something, however limited or slight.
- to have a particular flavor (often followed by of ):
The coffee tastes bitter. The bread tastes of mold.
- to smack or savor (usually followed by of ):
The story tastes of treason.
noun
- the act of tasting food or drink.
- the sense by which the flavor or savor of things is perceived when they are brought into contact with the tongue.
- the sensation or quality as perceived by this sense; flavor.
- a small quantity tasted; a morsel, bit, or sip.
- a relish, liking, or partiality for something:
a taste for music.
Synonyms: predisposition, appreciation, disposition, fondness
Antonyms: antipathy
- the sense of what is fitting, harmonious, or beautiful; the perception and enjoyment of what constitutes excellence in the fine arts, literature, fashion, etc.
Synonyms: judgment, perception, discernment
- the sense of what is seemly, polite, tactful, etc., to say or do in a given social situation.
- one's personal attitude or reaction toward an aesthetic phenomenon or social situation, regarded as either good or bad.
- the ideas of aesthetic excellence or of aesthetically valid forms prevailing in a culture or personal to an individual:
a sample of Victorian taste; I consulted only my own taste in decorating this room.
- the formal idiom preferred by a certain artist or culture; style; manner:
a façade in the Baroque taste.
- a slight experience or a sample of something:
a taste of adventure.
- a feeling or sensation resulting from an experience:
a compromise that left a bad taste in her mouth.
- Obsolete. test or trial.
taste
/ teɪst /
noun
- the sense by which the qualities and flavour of a substance are distinguished by the taste buds
- the sensation experienced by means of the taste buds
- the act of tasting
- a small amount eaten, drunk, or tried on the tongue
- a brief experience of something
a taste of the whip
- a preference or liking for something; inclination
to have a taste for danger
- the ability to make discerning judgments about aesthetic, artistic, and intellectual matters; discrimination
to have taste
- judgment of aesthetic or social matters according to a generally accepted standard
bad taste
- discretion; delicacy
that remark lacks taste
- obsolete.the act of testing
verb
- to distinguish the taste of (a substance) by means of the taste buds
- usually tr to take a small amount of (a food, liquid, etc) into the mouth, esp in order to test the quality
to taste the wine
- often foll by of to have a specific flavour or taste
the tea tastes of soap
this apple tastes sour
- whenintr, usually foll by of to have an experience of (something)
to taste success
- tr an archaic word for enjoy
- obsolete.tr to test by touching
Derived Forms
- ˈtastable, adjective
Other Words From
- tasta·ble tastea·ble adjective
- pre·taste noun verb (used with object) pretasted pretasting
- re·taste verb retasted retasting
- un·tasta·ble adjective
- un·tastea·ble adjective
- un·tasted adjective
- un·tasting adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of taste1
Word History and Origins
Origin of taste1
Idioms and Phrases
- to one's taste, agreeable or pleasing to one:
He couldn't find any ties that were completely to his taste.
- taste blood. blood ( def 24 ).
More idioms and phrases containing taste
see acquired taste ; dose (taste) of one's own medicine ; leave a bad taste in one's mouth ; no accounting for tastes ; poor taste .Synonym Study
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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