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taster

[ UK /tˈe‍ɪstɐ/ ]
[ US /ˈteɪstɝ/ ]
NOUN
  1. someone who samples food or drink for its quality

How To Use taster In A Sentence

  • Uday's a handful, living out some Baathist-inflected fantasia on De Palma's Scarface, shooting off guns indoors, plucking schoolgirls off the streets and raping them, exercising Caligulan droit du seigneur over a war hero's new bride, prompting her suicide, and mutilating and disembowelling his own dad's food-taster at a banquet to honour Mrs Hosni Mubarak par-TAY! The Devil's Double and more movies on the megalomaniacal
  • This evening of games on the beach includes water-sport taster sessions, rock-pooling, bird walks, star-gazing and a barbecue at sunset. Times, Sunday Times
  • To show that bumping off rivals is a universal feature of power politics, the food taster persists into the modern era. Times, Sunday Times
  • We went for the taster menu and were not disappointed, really superb food. Times, Sunday Times
  • One dishonest plumber does more harm than a hundred poetasters.
  • A poetaster's aesthetic feathers had been ruffled, but his humanity, anemic and amoral, had remained unstirred, somnolent, and moribund.
  • They are short, easy learning tasters that give people the chance to try new skills or hobbies.
  • This was the quality-control taster, said our guide.
  • The country teems with "poets, poetasters, poetitos, and poetaccios:" every man has his recognised position in literature as accurately defined as though he had been reviewed in a century of magazines, -- the fine ear of this people [22] causing them to take the greatest pleasure in harmonious sounds and poetical expressions, whereas a false quantity or a prosaic phrase excite their violent indignation. First Footsteps in East Africa
  • A professional tea taster, he was Typhoo's chief blender before joining Mumbo.
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