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crisp
[ krisp ]
adjective
- (especially of food) hard but easily breakable; brittle:
crisp toast.
- (especially of food) firm and fresh; not soft or wilted:
a crisp leaf of lettuce.
a crisp reply.
crisp repartee.
- clean-cut, neat, and well-pressed; well-groomed.
- invigorating; bracing:
crisp air.
- crinkled, wrinkled, or rippled, as skin or water.
- in small, stiff, or firm curls; curly.
verb (used with or without object)
- to make or become crisp.
- to curl.
noun
- Chiefly British. potato chip.
- Cooking. a dessert of fruit, as apples or apricots, baked with a crunchy mixture, usually of breadcrumbs, chopped nutmeats, butter, and brown sugar.
crisp
/ krɪsp /
adjective
- dry and brittle
- fresh and firm
crisp lettuce
- invigorating or bracing
a crisp breeze
- clear; sharp
crisp reasoning
- lively or stimulating
crisp conversation
- clean and orderly; neat
a crisp appearance
- concise and pithy; terse
a crisp reply
- wrinkled or curly
crisp hair
verb
- to make or become crisp
noun
- a very thin slice of potato fried and eaten cold as a snack
- something that is crisp
Derived Forms
- ˈcrispness, noun
- ˈcrisply, adverb
Other Words From
- crisply adverb
- crispness noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of crisp1
Word History and Origins
Origin of crisp1
Idioms and Phrases
see burn to a cinder (crisp) .Example Sentences
Exactly one month after the first straw goat was erected in Gävle, it was mysteriously burned to a crisp.
Note: If you prefer cookies thin and crisp, bake them straight from the mixing bowl.
If you prefer them chewy in the middle and crisp outside, chill the balls of dough.
Blumenthal, a courtly gentleman of 68 in a perfectly crisp blue shirt, gets laughs by trotting out his rudimentary Spanish.
De la Renta did design some stuff for Kennedy too—notably, one perfect belted sheath in crisp white linen.
"Garnache," came the other's crisp, metallic voice, and the name had a sound as of an oath on his lips.
The small grain crops had been burned to a crisp, and disaster hung over the land.
The day was perfect; as clear and bright, as mellow and crisp, as rich in colour, as only an October day in England can be.
The girls of the town could be readily distinguished by their crisp muslins and white hats and absence of dust.
It was one of those brilliant clear crisp days with which that high plateau can put even California to the blush.
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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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