have+a+taste

  • 41taste — 01. My Mexican friends tell me that British food [tastes] really bland. 02. Would you like a [taste] of my cheesecake? It s delicious. 03. This vegetable sauté is quite [tasty]. Is that ginger you put in it? 04. This spaghetti [tastes] just like… …

    Grammatical examples in English

  • 42taste — I n. appreciation sense of what is proper 1) to acquire, cultivate, develop a taste 2) to demonstrate, display, show (a) taste 3) (an) acquired; artistic; bad; discriminating; elegant, excellent, exquisite; good taste (it is bad taste to ignore… …

    Combinatory dictionary

  • 43Taste aversion — Conditioned taste aversion[1], also known as Garcia effect (after Dr. John Garcia), and as Sauce Bearnaise Syndrome , a term coined by Seligman and Hager,[2] is an example of classical conditioning or Pavlovian conditioning. Conditioned taste… …

    Wikipedia

  • 44taste — [c]/teɪst / (say tayst) verb (tasted, tasting) –verb (t) 1. to try the flavour or quality of (something) by taking some into the mouth: to taste food. 2. to eat or drink a little of: he hadn t tasted food for three days. 3. to perceive or… …

  • 45taste — n. & v. n. 1 a the sensation characteristic of a soluble substance caused in the mouth and throat by contact with that substance (disliked the taste of garlic). b the faculty of perceiving this sensation (was bitter to the taste). 2 a small… …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 46Taste the Blood of Dracula — Infobox Film name = Taste the Blood of Dracula caption = Promotional poster for Taste the Blood of Dracula director = Peter Sasdy producer = Aida Young writer = Anthony Hinds Bram Stoker (character) starring = Christopher Lee Geoffrey Keen Gwen… …

    Wikipedia

  • 47taste — [[t]teɪst[/t]] v. tast•ed, tast•ing, n. 1) phl to test the flavor or quality of by taking some into the mouth 2) to eat or drink a little of 3) to eat or drink: He hadn t tasted food for three days[/ex] 4) phl to perceive or distinguish the… …

    From formal English to slang

  • 48taste — I. verb (tasted; tasting) Etymology: Middle English, to touch, test, taste, from Anglo French taster, from Vulgar Latin *taxitare, frequentative of Latin taxare to touch, feel more at tax Date: 14th century transitive verb 1. to become acquainted …

    New Collegiate Dictionary

  • 49Taste bud — Infobox Anatomy Name = Taste bud Latin = caliculus gustatorius GraySubject = 222 GrayPage = 991 Caption = Semidiagrammatic view of a portion of the mucous membrane of the tongue. Two fungiform papillæ are shown. On some of the filiform papillæ… …

    Wikipedia

  • 50taste — Synonyms and related words: Atticism, affection, affinity, appetence, appetite, appreciate, appreciation, appreciation of differences, appreciativeness, apprehend, appropriateness, aroma, artistic judgment, assay, attribute, badge, bag, be aware… …

    Moby Thesaurus