different between cookbook vs delicious
cookbook
English
Alternative forms
- cook book
Etymology
From cook +? book; possibly also a calque of German Kochbuch, from kochen (“cook”) + Buch (“book”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?k?k?b?k/
Noun
cookbook (plural cookbooks)
- A book or an encyclopedia of recipes and cookery tips.
- (by extension) Any book of strategies.
- The Anarchist's Cookbook
Synonyms
- cookery book
- recipe book
Derived terms
- cookbookery
Translations
cookbook From the web:
- what cookbooks are worth money
- what cookbook should i buy
- what cookbooks should everyone own
- what cookbook should i buy quiz
- what cookbooks do chefs use
- what cookbooks are collectible
- what cookbooks are valuable
- what cookbook was used in julie and julia
delicious
English
Etymology
From Middle English delicious, from Anglo-Norman delicious, from Old French delicious, delicieux, from Late Latin d?lici?sus (“delicate, delicious”), from d?liciae (“delights”), plural of d?licia (“pleasure”), from delici? (“I allure, I entice”), from de- (“away”) + laci? (“I lure, I deceive”). Displaced native Middle English este (“delicious, favorable”) (from Old English ?ste (“delicious, dainty, luxurious, delicate”)), Middle English wunli, wunlic (“delicious, joyous”) (from Old English wynl?? (“pleasant, beautiful, joyful”)), Old English ?stel?c (“delicious, delicate, dainty”).
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /d??l???s/
- (US) IPA(key): /d??l???s/, /di?l???s/
- Rhymes: -???s
Adjective
delicious (comparative more delicious, superlative most delicious)
- Pleasing to taste; tasty.
- (colloquial) Metaphorically pleasing to taste; pleasing to the eyes or mind.
- The irony is delicious!
- 1986, Patrick Lichfield, Courvoisier's Book of the Best (page 230)
- But the houses are so delicious and the way they're townscaped on to hilly bits is absolutely wonderful.
- Jones had not travelled far before he paid his compliments to that beautiful planet, and, turning to his companion, asked him if he had ever beheld so delicious an evening?
- (slang) Having tremendous sex appeal.
Synonyms
- See also Thesaurus:delicious
Derived terms
Translations
Anagrams
- leucosiid, lousicide
Old French
Etymology
From Late Latin d?lici?sus, see above.
Adjective
delicious m (oblique and nominative feminine singular deliciouse)
- delicious; tasty
- noble; courtly; courteous
Declension
Descendants
- English: delicious
- French: délicieux
delicious From the web:
- what delicious mean
- what delicious food
- what's delicious in spanish
- what's delicious in italian
- what's delicious in korean
- what's delicious in french
- what's delicious real name
- what's delicious in japanese
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