[
UK
/fɹˈɒθ/
]
[ US /ˈfɹɔθ/ ]
[ US /ˈfɹɔθ/ ]
NOUN
-
a mass of small bubbles formed in or on a liquid
the beer had a thick head of foam
VERB
-
make froth or foam and become bubbly
The river foamed -
become bubbly or frothy or foaming
sparkling water
The boiling soup was frothing
sparkling water
The river was foaming -
exude or expel foam
the angry man was frothing at the mouth
How To Use froth In A Sentence
- The glass of beer was mostly froth.
- A Dry Cappuccino is a double shot of espresso with little or no steamed milk, but frothed milk on top.
- Use immersion blender or cappuccino machine steam attachment to froth the carrot foam mixture.
- She gives me a look so scathing that it melts the froth on my cappuccino. Times, Sunday Times
- Large deposits of frothy reddish-brown pyrolignic acid, or “wood vinegar,” as the men called it, had also been found, indicating, as Roebling said, “that a destructive distillation of wood had been going on.” The Great Bridge
- It was precision expectoration that accurately landed a deposit of froth about two feet from my Oxford brogues.
- Froth sauce using a hand-held immersion blender and drizzle foam atop ravioli.
- Frothy geysers and hissing fumaroles vent into icy air, huge herds of elk and bison gather in low basins for food and warmth, the forest glitters with ice, and a blanket of snow brings a rare silence.
- Reduce the heat and simmer for about 8 minutes, skimming the froth from the surface. Times, Sunday Times
- Or apparently go camping without toting ten pounds of coffee-making gear (including a frother for the proper amount of foam). Plastic Elimination Campaign: Kid's Dishes