2008年12月30日 星期二

garnish


garnish







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–verb (used with object) 

1. to provide or supply with something ornamental; adorn; decorate.

2. to provide (



food) with something that adds flavor, decorative color, etc.: to garnish boiled potatoes with chopped parsley. (荷蘭芹)



3. Law.

a. to attach (as money due or property belonging to a debtor) by garnishment; garnishee.

b. to summon in, so as to take part in litigation (訴訟) already pending between others. 



garnishment

扣押債務人財產的通知,扣押令,傳票

garnishee

第三債務人



–noun 

4. something placed around or on a food or in a beverage to add flavor, decorative color, etc.

5. adornment or decoration.

6. Chiefly British. a fee formerly demanded of a new convict or worker by the warden, boss, or fellow prisoners or workers.





PDVD_001 

The thing looks disgusting long before it's established that any individual burger is the ground residue of many, many messily butchered animals (plus their hormones and the contents of their intestines), given a dollop of extra fat, injected with chemical perfume, and possibly dipped in floor dirt or garnished with an employee's loogie.  



intestine



內部的,國內的 intestine [strife]

dollop

塊,團,份





pecuniary

culinary

[Kitchen] Confidential: Adventures in the Culinary Underbelly

kibble

who watches "Dark Shadows" and eats [kibble]

fodder

It's all just [fodder] for the media machine and the bloodthirsty public



porridge 麥片粥

junket

tapioca pudding 木薯澱粉

mush 軟糊狀食物 which has the effect of turning Eisner's Technicolor comic into a gray glob of [hardboiled] mush.



starch

He is so full of starch he can't [relax].

but the material remains [cloaked] by the very propriety, stiff manners and emotional [starchiness] the picture delineates in such copious detail.   

Dingy

















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