baked

[ UK /bˈe‍ɪkt/ ]
[ US /ˈbeɪkt/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. dried out by heat or excessive exposure to sunlight
    land lying baked in the heat
    the earth was scorched and bare
    sunbaked salt flats
    a vast desert all adust
    parched soil
  2. (bread and pastries) cooked by dry heat (as in an oven)
    baked goods
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How To Use baked In A Sentence

  • Combine the corn with steamed green vegetables like asparagus and offer baked potatoes to ensure the children don't go hungry.
  • In the evening, the menu takes on more of a bistro persona, with a la carte offerings spanning the gamut from burgers, roast chicken and baked fish to tasty "chasseur" hotpots of mussels steamed in wine (moules marinieres this would be called in France). News On Japan
  • The desserts were homey and filling - the baked banana with chocolate sauce is the ultimate for those people who love that combination.
  • As we got closer, a face so old and cragged with such deep wrinkles they looked like sun-baked crevasses formed by thousand of years of standing in the wind and rain. Guanajuato restaurants
  • The smoothly boiled porridge, with its accompaniment of thick yellow cream; the new-laid eggs; the grilled trout, fresh from the stream; the freshly baked "baps" and "scones," the crisp rolls of oatcake; and last, but not least, the delectable, home-made marmalade, which is as much a part of the meal as the coffee itself. Big Game A Story for Girls
  • There is a modeling clay that is nearly all silver once it is baked in your oven.
  • I got baked on tequila last summer and passed out in the street.
  • Summer had faded into fall, but even as September wore on Paris still baked under a strange late heat wave that showed no sign of letting up.
  • There was great cheese, baked rice with damson jam and nutmeg and golden syrup pudding.
  • That should have spelled the end of the convertible, except for one thing: The open car with its sun-baked, wind-blown passengers became a symbol of youth, freedom, and sexuality.
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