savory
adjEtymology
From the Middle English savory, savourie, from Old French savouré, from Old French savourer, from Late Latin sapōrāre, from Latin sapor (“taste, flavour”), from sapiō, sapere (“taste of, have a flavour of”).
Definitions
Tasty, attractive to the palate.
- The fine restaurant presented an array of savory dishes; each was delicious.
Either salty or spicy, but not sweet.
- The mushrooms, meat, bread, rice, peanuts and potatoes were all good savory foods.
Umami.
- The savory rabbit soup contrasted well with the sweet cucumber sandwiches with jam.
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Morally or ethically acceptable.
- Readers are to be warned that quotations in this chapter contain some not so savory language.
- The ruthless practices of the Ontario Film Censor Board are by now the laughing stock of most of the world. Scenes that contain more flesh or affection than they find savoury are simply hacked out of the film before it is released.
A savory snack.
- On Friday the pastry chef Pichet Ong will open his own cafe, with sweets and savories served at tables and a counter.
Any of several Mediterranean herbs, of the genus Satureja, grown as culinary flavourings.
- There are some who advise taking the noxious herb savory; in my judgment it is poison.
The leaves of these plants used as a flavouring.
A surname.
The neighborhood
- neighborumami
Derived
savorily, savoriness, unsavory, blue savory, summer savory, winter savory
Vish — recursive loop
A definitional loop anchored at savory. Each word in the ring is defined by the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself. Scroll to it and watch.
A definitional loop anchored at savory. Each word in the ring appears in the definition of the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself.
9 hops · closes at savory
curated · pre-corpus. live cycle detection across the full graph is the next major milestone.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA