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tannic

[ UK /tˈænɪk/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. derived from tannin

How To Use tannic In A Sentence

  • Filling the Chinese galls in copper container , extract tannic acid by water with pressurized metering pump.
  • Wines, particularly wines naturally low in tannins themselves, can taste aggressively tannic after being matured in barrels made from kiln-dried, as opposed to air-dried, wood.
  • This is a wine that you could start to consider keeping, the rich, highly concentrated fruit has wonderful mid-palate weight and sits within a tannic structure of great finesse.
  • a product of China and the East Indies, best known as Myrabolams and must have been utilized solely for the tannin they contain, which Loewe estimates to be identical with ellago-tannic acid, later discovered in the divi-divi, a fruit grown in South America, and bablah which is also a fruit of a species of Acacia, well known also for its gum. Forty Centuries of Ink
  • It's quite fiery stuff with pepper, spices and some tannic activity but best of all, it's over-brimming with summer fruit flavours.
  • He says he has united the Germanic Tribes, and the hordes of Iberia, Italia, and Britannica, in a full wave to conquer all.
  • Francis had been at His Britannic Majesty's Embassy in Berlin for nine months. DARE CALL IT TREASON
  • My notes found most of the tried-and-true performers to have made excessively weedy, leafy wines or overly extracted tannic wines.
  • The proprietress is a little tight, quite relaxed, and slightly philosophical, leaning against Marlowe, who sits on a stack of Britannicas beside her, watching the window. Archive 2008-05-01
  • Blessed with masses of ripe, velvety, cedary fruit and that classic tannic finish, this is bang on the money. Times, Sunday Times
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