[ UK /sˈuːp/ ]
[ US /ˈsup/ ]
NOUN
  1. an unfortunate situation
    we're in the soup now
  2. any composition having a consistency suggestive of soup
  3. liquid food especially of meat or fish or vegetable stock often containing pieces of solid food
VERB
  1. dope (a racehorse)
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How To Use soup In A Sentence

  • Just before serving, prepare a few small cheese ravioli and place them in each bowl before you add the soup.
  • The production sounds a little soupy here, but I think it really adds to the song if you can understand that.
  • FK - pressure-cook would be the best way, but you could try boiling it with plenty of water so that it becomes really mushy, then blend it in a mixer to make a thick soup. or you could use a regular slow-cooker that you get in the US, except that it would be a bit time-consuming: Gujarati Dal (Healthy Lentil Soup)
  • Going upmarket, I can go into Dear Soup except on busy days, as the tables are a bit close together and sitting beside a slurper is an ever-present danger. A table for one | 世論 What Japan Thinks
  • No matter that there were no green beans or zucchinies or that bok choy is Asian not Mediterranean, minestrone is primarily a vegetable soup and so long as you have a couple of primary flavours right, the rest will take care of itself. At My Table
  • Another friend notes a shift in the type of gifts given at wedding showers, a reversion to 1950s-style offerings: soup ladles and frilly aprons are being unwrapped along with see-through nighties and push-up bras.
  • That's why I contend, with just a soupçon of exaggeration, that Britain's big choice will be made on May 29.
  • I passed plunging gorges, streams in spate, riverbanks ripped open, fields flooded, a brown soup drowning the track.
  • Allow the soup to sit for at least half an hour and then strain out all the vegetables to leave a clear broth. Times, Sunday Times
  • Most often, this implies a life on city streets begging, panhandling, petty theft, and using charity and soup kitchens close to the drug source.
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