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单词 rusk
释义

Definition of rusk in English:

rusk

noun rʌskrəsk
British
  • 1A light, dry biscuit or piece of twice-baked bread, especially one prepared for use as baby food.

    (尤指用作婴儿食品的)脆饼干;面包干

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Before you can open your eyes and ask for milk and rusks, you have a birth certificate and National Insurance number slapped on you.
    • ‘We snuggled back into bed for a good read, rusks and coffee,’ she says.
    • I mean, what did they think little Charlotte was going to do: storm the front benches and hold the leader of the house hostage at dummy-point until she achieved free rusks for all?
    • Visitors can also elect to go on guided tours of the zoo which include slide shows, drinks, rusks and marshmallows around the bonfire.
    • Consider the cost of 36 nappy changes a day, 24 feeds, five tubs of baby formula and four and a half boxes of rusks per week.
    • Wheat-based foods which contain gluten, for example, breakfast cereals, wheat flour or rusks.
    • And even a plate of chocolate bourbons and some wet rusks aren't going to calm me down now.
    • The bread has dwindled by now to crumbs and rusks.
    • Consequently, the first foods to pass Oscar's lips (when they didn't stick to his face, hair and fingers) were not baby rice, rusks and gloop out of a jar.
    • This sleepover, on Monday 15 December, comes complete with a light supper and breakfast rusks.
    • A midnight snack of raw horse meat and rusks was followed later by a walk and a hearty breakfast of egg, milk and cornflakes.
    • If they were no-added-sugar celery flavoured rusks, then they'd probably be not bad for you at all.
    • What I recall is that, for the first time, one of the teams wasn't dressed in green and gold, as had been the case the year before, when my dad woke me up with coffee and rusks to watch the Springboks take on the All Blacks in New Zealand.
    • And the more we do to perpetuate the myths surrounding motherhood, the more unbearable we make the cross to bear for those who don't find it all rusks and baby bottles.
    • The traditional cheese and Marmite rusks have been well and truly supplanted.
    • Dry Weetbix, children's rusks and Berocca were just some of the substances the iron men and women of Tindal had to swallow.
    • I remember polishing off my rusks, knocking back my baby milk and jumping down from my high chair to assist.
    • Pensioners got their promised increase, but only R50-which will allow some to buy shoes or rusks and one to save towards a remote for her television because she is too frail to get up and change channels.
    • When she started weaning Cameron on to ‘mushy’ food such as wheat-based rusks, his health deteriorated further - and it wasn't just eczema any more.
    1. 1.1mass noun Twice-baked bread used in foods such as sausages, and formerly as rations at sea.
      (如用作香肠馅的,旧时用作航海口粮的)面包干
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The delicacy, a combination of congealed pigs' blood, fat and rusk encased in a length of intestine, is closely related to German blutwurst, French boudin noir and Spanish morcilla.
      • Sharing a common origin with the modern biscuit, medieval rusks were known as panis biscoctus (meaning ‘twice-cooked bread’) and were used as a form of preserved bread to provision armies and ships at sea.
      • Following a dramatic pause - during which you wonder if it's also 20% rusk and 10% water - we're told that it's actually farm-reared, organic, golden, Wiltshire farm chicken.
      • The Lancashire town of Bury is famed for black pudding, a regional delicacy consisting of congealed pigs' blood, fat, and rusk, encased in a length of intestine.
      • If I were a perfectionist I'd say they are still a tad lean, so we added a bit more fat for the second batch, which used oatmeal for rusk instead of breadcrumbs, and included a load of sage and thyme from the garden.
      • ‘I use oatmeal instead of rusk, which I think gives them better flavour,’ he says.
      • Similarly, those healthier lower-fat pork sausages are probably padded out with wheat rusk.
      • Sausages have traditionally been regarded as anathema to slimmers because they often include a lot of bread and rusk.
      • He was standing at the sausage-filling machine, having just packed it with a delicious-smelling mix of minced pork, herbs and rusk.
      • The simplicity of sausage-making fascinated me as I watched Jonathan sprinkle the rusks and seasonings over the meat.

Origin

Late 16th century: from Spanish or Portuguese rosca 'twist, coil, roll of bread', of unknown ultimate origin.

Rhymes

busk, dusk, husk, musk, tusk

Definition of rusk in US English:

rusk

nounrəskrəsk
British
  • 1A light, dry biscuit or piece of twice-baked bread, especially one prepared for use as baby food.

    (尤指用作婴儿食品的)脆饼干;面包干

    Example sentencesExamples
    • If they were no-added-sugar celery flavoured rusks, then they'd probably be not bad for you at all.
    • When she started weaning Cameron on to ‘mushy’ food such as wheat-based rusks, his health deteriorated further - and it wasn't just eczema any more.
    • Consider the cost of 36 nappy changes a day, 24 feeds, five tubs of baby formula and four and a half boxes of rusks per week.
    • This sleepover, on Monday 15 December, comes complete with a light supper and breakfast rusks.
    • Dry Weetbix, children's rusks and Berocca were just some of the substances the iron men and women of Tindal had to swallow.
    • Visitors can also elect to go on guided tours of the zoo which include slide shows, drinks, rusks and marshmallows around the bonfire.
    • A midnight snack of raw horse meat and rusks was followed later by a walk and a hearty breakfast of egg, milk and cornflakes.
    • What I recall is that, for the first time, one of the teams wasn't dressed in green and gold, as had been the case the year before, when my dad woke me up with coffee and rusks to watch the Springboks take on the All Blacks in New Zealand.
    • I remember polishing off my rusks, knocking back my baby milk and jumping down from my high chair to assist.
    • And even a plate of chocolate bourbons and some wet rusks aren't going to calm me down now.
    • I mean, what did they think little Charlotte was going to do: storm the front benches and hold the leader of the house hostage at dummy-point until she achieved free rusks for all?
    • The bread has dwindled by now to crumbs and rusks.
    • Wheat-based foods which contain gluten, for example, breakfast cereals, wheat flour or rusks.
    • ‘We snuggled back into bed for a good read, rusks and coffee,’ she says.
    • Consequently, the first foods to pass Oscar's lips (when they didn't stick to his face, hair and fingers) were not baby rice, rusks and gloop out of a jar.
    • And the more we do to perpetuate the myths surrounding motherhood, the more unbearable we make the cross to bear for those who don't find it all rusks and baby bottles.
    • Before you can open your eyes and ask for milk and rusks, you have a birth certificate and National Insurance number slapped on you.
    • Pensioners got their promised increase, but only R50-which will allow some to buy shoes or rusks and one to save towards a remote for her television because she is too frail to get up and change channels.
    • The traditional cheese and Marmite rusks have been well and truly supplanted.
    1. 1.1 Twice-baked bread used as extra filling, for example in sausages, and formerly as rations at sea.
      (如用作香肠馅的,旧时用作航海口粮的)面包干
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Similarly, those healthier lower-fat pork sausages are probably padded out with wheat rusk.
      • The simplicity of sausage-making fascinated me as I watched Jonathan sprinkle the rusks and seasonings over the meat.
      • ‘I use oatmeal instead of rusk, which I think gives them better flavour,’ he says.
      • Following a dramatic pause - during which you wonder if it's also 20% rusk and 10% water - we're told that it's actually farm-reared, organic, golden, Wiltshire farm chicken.
      • If I were a perfectionist I'd say they are still a tad lean, so we added a bit more fat for the second batch, which used oatmeal for rusk instead of breadcrumbs, and included a load of sage and thyme from the garden.
      • The Lancashire town of Bury is famed for black pudding, a regional delicacy consisting of congealed pigs' blood, fat, and rusk, encased in a length of intestine.
      • Sharing a common origin with the modern biscuit, medieval rusks were known as panis biscoctus (meaning ‘twice-cooked bread’) and were used as a form of preserved bread to provision armies and ships at sea.
      • Sausages have traditionally been regarded as anathema to slimmers because they often include a lot of bread and rusk.
      • He was standing at the sausage-filling machine, having just packed it with a delicious-smelling mix of minced pork, herbs and rusk.
      • The delicacy, a combination of congealed pigs' blood, fat and rusk encased in a length of intestine, is closely related to German blutwurst, French boudin noir and Spanish morcilla.

Origin

Late 16th century: from Spanish or Portuguese rosca ‘twist, coil, roll of bread’, of unknown ultimate origin.

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更新时间:2025/1/14 6:56:31