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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.
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  • 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.
  • Lots of oak, flavors of pineapple and mango, and high alcohol were tasters' impressions here.
  • A panel of trained professional tasters also found electroheated milk to be sweeter, with less bitter, oxidized and stale flavors than UHT processed milk.
  • I'm afraid that this is just a taster of what has been going on this term chez miglior acque but I admit I'll have to cool it for a while. Books Books Books
  • Expect yoga, meditation, snorkelling and freediving taster session. Times, Sunday Times
  • Free one-day taster courses run throughout the year to give prospective students an idea of what studying at Northumbria would be like. Times, Sunday Times
  • It still has a slightly firm finish but this wine scored well with high awards by all tasters.
  • A poetaster's aesthetic feathers had been ruffled, but his humanity, anemic and amoral, had remained unstirred, somnolent, and moribund.
  • Like a practised wine taster, she swilled the dark liquid around in her mouth then swallowed.
  • Clubs usually run taster days for beginners while the organisation runs sailing courses and offers exams to prove competence. Times, Sunday Times
  • Dissolving salt: Finely ground salt such as canner's salt or table salt dissolves much taster than coarsely ground salt (rock salt). Chapter 7
  • This is an ideal taster before you rush out and buy the album - which you inevitably will.
  • This is quite a nice idea, as you don't just get a leaflet for the show, but several pages of information that gives you a taster of what it's all about.
  • This recipe produces a cake with a moist, slightly gummy texture, which some of our tasters actually preferred.
  • We begin with the swirl of the glass to release the aromas, very much part of a winetaster's pre-drink set-up. Times, Sunday Times
  • Interior design Many of the big London schools offer short taster courses. Times, Sunday Times
  • When presented with pairs of food, our trained tasters were able to detect the irradiated beef or chicken 66 of 72 times because it had a very slight ‘off’ taste.
  • The tasters did note that coffee from blade-ground beans had less body than coffee from burr-ground beans.
  • The scene which appears most frequently in art shows the cook repelling boarders, beating off the tasters and nibblers who hover hopefully round his precious stewpot.
  • This exhibition is a taster for a show that simply must happen.
  • It requires the youngsters to be away from home for a fortnight and furthers their academic education or gives them a chance to get a taster of subjects like archaeology not taught in school.
  • The very oversight perceptible to any eye and painful to any ear not sealed up by stepdame nature from all perception of pleasure or of pain derivable from good verse or bad -- the reckless reiteration of the same rhyme with but one poor couplet intervening -- suggests rather the oversight of an unfledged poet than the obtuseness of a full-grown poeticule or poetaster. A Study of Shakespeare
  • But more than 35 papillae indicates that you are a supertaster - as are many professional tasters and chefs.
  • I hadn't had time to ponder on what my taster of a Bird Experience Day at Leighton Hall's falconry would involve.
  • People who have lots of papillae have been dubbed supertasters for their ability to really perceive, say, the bitterness in arugula or the subtle sweetness of a pea.
  • Scanning electron micrographs of the discs of the tube feet of Odontaster validus revealed varying degrees of concavity.
  • The only correct way to hold the glass is by the stem though some professional tasters and aficionados like to hold it by the base.
  • Matthew, 34, who owns the Chilli Lime Deli in Fleming Square, Blackburn, moved his French stock back to his shop but was able to leave tasters on the stall.
  • For a taster of the night, log on to the Test the Nation website and take the sample test - www.bbc.co.uk/testthenation.
  • The youngsters are taking part in a project called Music Xpress and today's session is a taster for next week's four-day residential course at the Wiltshire Music Centre.
  • Even the most ingenious taster can be hard pressed to find adjectives to describe the quintessential flavour of Sylvaner.
  • In 1912, pharmacist William Scoville devised the first systematic test for ranking the pungency of peppers using a panel of tasters.
  • Madsen's view was expanded upon by Blake, who further treated Platasterias as a subgenus of Luidia, assignable to one of four subdivisions of the species-rich genus Luidia sensu Doderlein.
  • The opening gala began with a 90-minute taster menu of acts plucked from the festival schedule. Times, Sunday Times
  • There is a visual banquet of samples and swatches available for the asking, so if you like something ask for a little taster to slip into your bag.
  • Wine tasters have their own vocabulary or jargon, just like other groups of enthusiasts: computer geeks, ballroom dancers, etc.
  • Even the Pinot Noir sometimes seemed more mellow, which some tasters liked.
  • Or is he a poetaster whose taste is overridden by the dream of a talent he has never possessed?
  • James gives you a taster of the inevitable ‘journal’ publication.
  • He started at Taylors as a trainee taster and quality sales assistant, dealing in tea and coffee.
  • You can tell a great deal about a leader from his food taster. Times, Sunday Times
  • I got my info from winkipedia and filmed with fraps, edited with sony vegas 8 pro and used just flight's traffic x for AI I would like suggestions of future airports, can be anywhere not just america, this is a taster. WN.com - Articles related to Southwest CEO is defining himself as a leader âEuro" without bag fees
  • You have revealed yourself to the world as a conceited little poetaster. Times, Sunday Times
  • YOUNGSTERS have been given a taster of what it is like to play korfball. Undefined
  • Of course, ‘poetic’ is what poets professed to be avoiding in those days and, indeed, throughout history, ‘poetic’ being a form of falsity and artifice peculiar to all preceding generations of poetasters.
  • The Swindon singing surgeon is to treat shoppers this Easter with a musical taster from his CD.
  • In another highlight, the revue will serve up a taster of Shipton's next musical at the Rowntree Theatre, Pippin.
  • In a test last year, tasters preferred London tap water to bottled mineral waters.
  • This was a blind test, with two groups of tasters sampling beer in unmarked cups. Taste Test: Pumpkin beers
  • Is it the perfect taster for the album? The Sun
  • As a taster of what's to come, this comes close to completely satisfying the appetite.
  • No encores, but a delightful taster for great things surely to come. Times, Sunday Times
  • They studied 38 traits using a variety of physical and biochemical assays, plus a panel of trained tasters.
  • Heinz tomato ketchup: synthetic, bitter and vinegary, according to some tasters. Heinz left playing tomato catch-up after ketchup tasting trouncing
  • To the Edinburgh literati who took him up after the success of his Kilmarnock edition of 1786 he played up to the image of the ‘heaven-taught ploughman’ as created by that second-rate poetaster Henry Mackenzie.
  • Sir Titus Salt kept a watchful eye over a panel of beer tasters judging a competition to recreate a brew in his honour yesterday.
  • For once, readers will see how delightful great poets are, and how nauseating are poetasters.
  • We await your nominations, but be mindful of the neglected distinction between poet and poetaster. The Times Literary Supplement
  • The company also says its cheese was picked as the consumers' favourite in blind tests it conducted involving 300 tasters.
  • The event will include displays from wine producers, whisky distillers and champagne tasters.
  • Working Links are running taster courses with employers for people who want to try out a call centre career. The Sun
  • The highlight of their year is a pageant scripted by a poetaster whose outdated politics sentimentalize the indigenous culture. The Times Literary Supplement
  • Sometimes we just want a taster. Times, Sunday Times
  • Jovianus Pontanus makes an old fool rhyme, and turn poetaster to please his mistress. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • It is the job of the tea blender - a tea taster of many years standing - to ensure that his company blend meets all the criteria.
  • The Golden Triangle packs some of the country's most enduring icons and rich experiences into a small space and time, making it an ideal taster of what India has to offer.
  • 00: 30 Northern clingfish Gobiesox maeandricus (Girard, 1858); 00: 34 Delicate six-armed sea star - Leptasterias aequalis (Stimpson, 1862); 00: 39 Smooth scaled-chiton - Lepidozona interstinctus (Gould, 1846); 00: 43 Baetic olive - Olivella baetica Carpenter, 1864; 00: 48 WN.com - Articles related to Tourism revenues up 28% in first half - report
  • The opening gala began with a 90-minute taster menu of acts plucked from the festival schedule. Times, Sunday Times
  • Having rooms on site means wine lovers can enjoy one taster too many, then roll into bed. Times, Sunday Times
  • The book is essentially a taster for those unfamiliar with the subject.
  • This recipe produces a cake with a moist, slightly gummy texture, which some of our tasters actually preferred.
  • In Merseyside 250 young people have attended taster days this summer. Times, Sunday Times
  • My best advice, Olga, is to be guided by the Evening Press's ‘professional’ food tasters; you can't go far wrong with them.
  • Never mind that the vast majority of vintners and tasters and sommeliers are men.
  • The taster monitors first whether the wine smells fresh and clean, or whether any off-odours indicate the presence of a wine fault.
  • a poetaster "stewing" his brains with a poem of this description, which of course demanded a certain amount of tedious and minute attention to the arrangement of the name of the individual to whom the anagram or acrostic was to be addressed, and this was especially the case, where the writer contemplated The Lucasta Poems
  • One taster said it reminded him of pickled ginger at a sushi bar; another liked how the gingery kick made her sneeze. The Spice Is Right
  • I'm also pleased to see that they didn't include a poem by that poetaster Barack Obama, given that Moi, too, am running for President. MY POEM IS BETTER THAN YOURS
  • A new centre for disabled adults will be giving a taster of the activities it offers next month.
  • Professional tasters spend most of their time tasting alcoholic drinks, so it's pleasant to foray into the non-alcoholic sector.
  • But I have been asked to write something here because there are people reading this who don't know anything about food tasters.
  • Here's a taster of what will be in print next month.
  • Sir Titus Salt kept a watchful eye over a panel of beer tasters judging a competition to recreate a brew in his honour yesterday.
  • A French gastro-psycho-thriller about the psychologically twisted relationship between a young waiter and a pompous, manipulative businessman who hires him as a food taster.
  • Alpha taster shouts [in frantic Shatner-esque desperation]: What's in a score? Audio from a tasting with Robert Parker | Dr Vino's wine blog
  • There is a kind of darnel, called lolium murinum, because so counterfeiting corn, that even the mice themselves (experience should make them good tasters) are sometimes deceived therewith. Good Thoughts in Bad Times and Other Papers.
  • Like wine tasters, coffee tasters have developed a specialized vocabulary to analyze the complex flavors and feel of a cup of coffee.
  • In the U.S. and, to a lesser extent Canada, Starbucks and its many imitators have done a good job of conditioning people to associate high quality — or, at the very least, a high price — with incinerated beans buried in steamed milk, but professional tasters have no interest in dark roasts, which taste like process, not product. Buying and brewing good coffee in Mexico
  • The prime poetaster likes stringing words together
  • A tweedy poetaster who spent his time spinning out parables and Japanese koans…or a bland Jesus who simply told people to look at lilies in the fields — such a Jesus would threaten no one, just as the university professors who create him the Jesus Seminar and their ilk threaten no one. Archive 2007-09-09
  • Martin said: ‘Andrew likes a drop or two, Dad enjoys the occasional taster, but the truth is that I am teetotal!’
  • The professional chocolate tasters have a great time as, unlike their wine-tasting counterparts, they don't have to spit it out.
  • Many wine tasters have resorted to using anthropomorphic terms such as aggressive, clumsy, gutsy and precocious.
  • There have been poetasters and quack-theorists from the moment imagination emerged in human consciousness.
  • Afterwards the students divided into groups of ten and an instructor took each group for a taster of the snow.
  • Acidity is used to indicate the quality of tartness or sharpness to the taster, the presence of agreeable fruit of acids.
  • I have worked terribly hard, and done good, permanent work - and I have passed the turn of my life and I am a beggar with no more recognition than the slightest poetaster.
  • There is a kind of darnel, called lolium murinum, because so counterfeiting corn, that even the mice themselves (experience should make them good tasters) are sometimes deceived therewith. Good Thoughts in Bad Times and Other Papers.
  • Being decently and orderlye pullished, with a requisite rebatement, _Lataster gule thore orbicle, Astragals_ or Hypnerotomachia The Strife of Loue in a Dreame
  • Time and their own "inherent perishableness" soon remove all traces of the poetasters. The Joyful Heart
  • Partying Muscovites do not do insignificant taster bites of food; they do whole meals.
  • Some publications use panels or teams of tasters, so the person who steered you toward that great Spanish Rioja may not be the same one praising the German Riesling.
  • In a one-day taster of paragliding with Active Edge, I manage to achieve several exhilarating flights, but not without some thorough grounding first.
  • The very oversight perceptible to any eye and painful to any ear not sealed up by stepdame nature from all perception of pleasure or of pain derivable from good verse or bad -- the reckless reiteration of the same rhyme with but one poor couplet intervening -- suggests rather the oversight of an unfledged poet than the obtuseness of a full-grown poeticule or poetaster. A Study of Shakespeare
  • A tantalising taster from new album Tomorrow. The Sun
  • His verse has the sing - song rhythm of a poetaster.
  • Supertasters are endowed with far more fungiform papillae than nontasters, she reports, as one can discover by simple experiment: Paint your tongue with blue food coloring, shine a flashlight on it, and look in a mirror. Tastes and Pleasures
  • A professional tea taster, he was Typhoo's chief blender before joining Mumbo.
  • I am also sampling the patchwork and quilting taster course during Adult Learners' Week.
  • Ante-coxal piece: Coleoptera; that portion of the metasternum lying in front of the posterior coxae, often passing between them and meeting the abdomen of mandible, is the lateral sclerite of the clypeus; - one on each side. Explanation of Terms Used in Entomology
  • The opening gala began with a 90-minute taster menu of acts plucked from the festival schedule. Times, Sunday Times
  • Now Dekker, in his 'Satiromastix, in which all personal insults are to be avenged [28] (for which reason the chief personages of' The Poetaster 'are introduced under the same name), makes Horace give forth a long song in praise of' heades thicke of hair, 'whilst Crispinus gives another in honour of' balde heads; 'from which we conclude that Chloe's remark on Shakspere and Montaigne
  • But Heinz scored just two out of five for taste, with many tasters describing its flavour as "artificial" and '"synthetic", and claiming it had a "bitter" and "vinegary" taste. Heinz left playing tomato catch-up after ketchup tasting trouncing
  • Sir Lewis Morris was a voluminous poetaster with a common mind. Oscar Wilde, His Life and Confessions
  • In a test last year, tasters preferred London tap water to bottled mineral waters.
  • However, supertasters may also snub vegetables, such as broccoli and cauliflower, because they can detect a slight bitterness in their flavor as well.
  • A taster day is this Friday in Market Square with the main market on Church Street from Saturday to Monday.
  • If you're like most people in Montreal, you're probably looking for something to do on a Saturday night that's the perfect mix of the right music, a taster's choice of libations and intoxicants, and a good helping of debauchery.
  • The Ghandi special thali was apparently designed to act as a taster of a number of classic Indian dishes - seekh kebab, chicken tikka, samosa, onion bhaji and tandoori chicken.
  • Taster days are to be held in the interim period with several variations of each brand to assess the preference.
  • The overture is a magnificent summing-up of the trials and tribulations, the twists and turns in the plot, and a splendid taster for the delights to come.
  • People who have lots of papillae have been dubbed supertasters for their ability to really perceive, say, the bitterness in arugula or the subtle sweetness of a pea.
  • Many scientific teachers of literature never find this out; the poetaster discovers it because he has been trying to make poetry, though he has hard luck.
  • Here, in one gallery space, is a taster from the vast Scottish National Photography Collection, a richly varied archive that runs to more than 27,000 photographs.
  • A quarter offer paid internships and a third run open days and other taster experiences. Times, Sunday Times
  • She runs the regular Making Choices course offering people a taster of what a career in child care might offer.
  • Other jobs on offer include a Fairy Penguin home remodeller on Kangaroo Island, a shark personality profiler at Port Lincoln, and a beer taster. Yahoo! News: Latest news headlines News Headlines | Top Stories
  • Expect yoga, meditation, snorkelling and freediving taster session. Times, Sunday Times
  • The team's formula is useful for more than just helping a wine taster "impress his friends," Reclari says.
  • ‘There were some passable wines but, in general, this was a shocking experience,’ one taster said.
  • I wanted the filling to be the real thing so I tested the recipe with many of my trusted tasters in the pub before I settled on the final mix.
  • Whatever your interest, why not check out the demonstration taster free of charge.
  • His verse has the sing - song rhythm of a poetaster.
  • The examples pictured above are just a taster of the product which offers our famous vulture logo on no less than five different shirts.
  • An over-eager fellow taster twirls his glass with a flourish and sends four deadly thimblefuls of Pinot Noir flying in your direction.
  • So for ages, the domain of beer analysis has been left to the subjectivity of professional tasters.
  • But it gives you a perfect taster menu. The Sun
  • It should be stated that the word porringer, as used by English collectors, usually refers to a deep cup with a cover and two handles, while what we call porringers are known to these collectors as bleeding-basins or tasters. Home Life in Colonial Days
  • I offer my apologies: you're still a rotten poetaster, but I can't complain about your spelling.
  • It requires the youngsters to be away from home for a fortnight and furthers their academic education or gives them a chance to get a taster of subjects like archaeology not taught in school.
  • His verse has the sing - song rhythm of a poetaster.
  • The programme is intended as a taster for those who might like to find out more about studying computer science.
  • Nerinaeum: a ventral thoracic sclerite between the metasternum and posterior coxa in some Coleoptera. Explanation of Terms Used in Entomology
  • I'd probably be a food critic or a food taster because I like pies!
  • Taster sessions in drawing, art, photography, collage and sculpture were offered.
  • With it comes a case of wine that steers the taster through a range of styles and regions.
  • This is a taster of great things to come. Times, Sunday Times
  • Poetasters and cheap sentimentalists will berhyme and beguile you: I cannot help it; but I will at least attempt to administer the corrective of what should be common sense. Gala-days
  • Two tasters identified the organic chutney correctly and said it was 'vinegary but fruitier and more rounded'. Times, Sunday Times
  • Gone were the taster menus of bits and bobs, a nasty recent fashion. Times, Sunday Times
  • People can always come in for a taster session and see how it goes without any commitment.
  • The Tragically Hip – Little bones, something on, New orleans is sinking, Nautical Distaster, Gift shop, at the hundredth meridian (theres more) Matthew Yglesias » The Ultimate Nineties Alt-Rock Playlist
  • Having entered upon a course of disclamation, I should like to make a mild protest against a further charge that Georgian Poetry has merely encouraged a small clique of mutually indistinguishable poetasters to abound in their own and each other's sense or nonsense. Georgian Poetry 1920-22
  • At a wine merchant's warehouse, the regular taster died, and the director started looking for a new one to hire.
  • We are on the telly again tomorrow night when we face Nottingham Forest and that might be a taster for a match that will be played at the end of the season.
  • The traditional Slovakian dish of goulash went down very well with the food tasters.
  • Ante-coxal piece: Coleoptera; that portion of the metasternum lying in front of the posterior coxae, often passing between them and meeting the abdomen of mandible, is the lateral sclerite of the clypeus; - one on each side. Explanation of Terms Used in Entomology
  • Like a practised wine taster, she swilled the dark liquid around in her mouth then swallowed.
  • This was just a taster menu, the celebs have worse coming. The Sun
  • In fact, the world's tasters, master distillers and blenders have long realised that whisky and champagne evolve in the bottle.
  • These two volumes belonged to clergyman and poetaster John Lea Simcox, who died in July 1840 at the age of 26; they were taken as a memorial by a friend, Laura Price, from Birmingham. eBay The Little Professor:
  • “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 people22 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
  • On Sunday he gave a taster of the walk, which will be officially launched at the Keighley Festival from June 18 to 26.
  • In more elegant surroundings, you spit into a spittoon, usually a simple container like a large bowl (one per taster) or an ice bucket that two or three tasters share.
  • An anecdote about food tasters begins: ‘One bright summer day, I had lunch with two women who run a company in New Jersey called Sensory Spectrum.’
  • OK, we've reached the end of my taster menu for the mind. Times, Sunday Times
  • The Norwegians still speak of him as himmelstraevende sublim ( "sublime in his heavenly aspiration"); the Danes will have it that he was an hysterical poetaster. Henrik Ibsen
  • She is the opposite of heavy-handed, the literary equivalent of a supertaster, repeatedly picking out the unobvious note. The Times Literary Supplement
  • In fact, you can tell most of it from the fact that he has a food taster at all. Times, Sunday Times
  • Thus, a highly discriminating palate may have saved the life of animals and savages, but what can its subtleness do nowadays beyond making us into gormandisers and winebibbers, or, at best, into cooks and tasters for the service of gormandising and winebibbing persons? Laurus Nobilis Chapters on Art and Life
  • The first day's walking from Knighton to Felindre provides a good taster of what to expect.
  • If you can stomach such ravings, here's a taster.
  • It takes five years to train a tea taster, including a year working overseas, with recruits given increasing amounts of responsibility as their training progresses. Times, Sunday Times
  • This is not a whisky-tasters' guide and nor is it a tale of blokes guzzling top-shelf liquor at an English publisher's expense.
  • For serious tasters, avoidance of holiday weekends is a must as the crowds can be bothersome at times. The New York Cork Report:

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