sugar
nounEtymology
Etymology tree Proto-Indo-European *ḱorkeh₂ Proto-Indo-Iranian *ćárkaraH Proto-Indo-Aryan *śárkaraH Sanskrit शर्क॑रा (śárkarā) Gandhari 𐨭𐨐𐨪 (śakara)bor. Middle Persian 𐭱𐭪𐭥 (šakar)bor. Arabic سُكَّر (sukkar)bor. Old Italian zuccherobor. Old French çucrebor. Middle English sugre English sugar Inherited from Middle English sugre, borrowed from Old French çucre, borrowed from Old Italian zucchero, borrowed from Arabic سُكَّر (sukkar), borrowed from Middle Persian 𐭱𐭪𐭥 (šakar), borrowed from Gandhari 𐨭𐨐𐨪 (śakara), from Sanskrit शर्क॑रा (śárkarā), from Proto-Indo-Aryan *śárkaraH, from Proto-Indo-Iranian *ćárkaraH, from Proto-Indo-European *ḱorkeh₂ (“gravel”). Akin to Ancient Greek κρόκη (krókē, “pebble”), whence the words crocodile and krokodil are derived. Doublet of jaggery and sucro-. The verb is from Middle English sugren, from the noun.
- derived from sugren
- derived from *ćárkaraH✻
- derived from *śárkaraH✻
- derived from शर्क॑रा
- derived from 𐭱𐭪𐭥
- derived from سُكَّر
- derived from zucchero
- derived from çucre
- derived from sugre
Definitions
A food consisting of small, sweet crystals, principally of sucrose, obtained from sugar…
A food consisting of small, sweet crystals, principally of sucrose, obtained from sugar cane or sugar beet and used as sweetener and preservative.
- Even in extreme cases such as chemical pollution in the Florida Everglades from heavily subsidized sugar farming, strong regulations are routinely blocked by industry.
Any specific variety of sugar.
Any of various small, water-soluble carbohydrates such as are used by organisms for…
Any of various small, water-soluble carbohydrates such as are used by organisms for energy and various other purposes.
- At the end of the second week there were less reducing sugars in the unpruned plants than in the previous week, but those in the pruned plants were the same.
- Generally speaking, plants have a much greater variety of sugars and linkages than animal tissues have.
- The major free sugars in plants are the monosaccharides, glucose and fructose (and the disaccharide sucros), together with traces of xylose, rhamnose and galactose.
›+ 21 more definitionsshow fewer
A small serving of this substance (typically about one teaspoon), used to sweeten a drink.
- He usually has his coffee white with one sugar.
- “A slice of lemon and two sugars, please.” “You needn't have said that. I know how you like your tea. I know how you like everything.”
- Skim milk, two sugar.
A bowl or other container of sugar.
- Pass the sugar, please
A term of endearment.
- I'll be with you in a moment, sugar.
- Sugar, ah honey honey / You are my candy girl / And you've got me wanting you
Affection shown by kisses or kissing.
- Gimme some sugar, baby.
Effeminacy in a male, often implying homosexuality.
- I think John has a little bit of sugar in him.
- There are depths and heights of beauty in him beyond tears - but there is no sugar, not even any honey.
- The crossdresser is showing the desire to be "sugar and spice" through feminine clothing and through the expression of feminine feelings.
Diabetes.
- The veterinarian said his real problem was that he had sugar, and not to concentrate on the problem with his eyes.
Anything resembling sugar in taste or appearance, especially in chemistry.
- Sugar of lead (lead acetate) is a poisonous white crystalline substance with a sweet taste.
- The fluor acid, the acid of sugar, of phosphorus, and vitriol, separate magnelia from the acid of arsenic; but the acid of tartar, united with arsenicated magnesia, is generally found to compose a triple salt.
Compliment or flattery used to disguise or render acceptable something obnoxious
Compliment or flattery used to disguise or render acceptable something obnoxious; honeyed or soothing words.
Heroin.
Money.
Syntactic sugar.
- However, this bookkeeping is much less local syntax and sugar.
To add sugar to
To add sugar to; to sweeten with sugar.
- John heavily sugars his coffee.
- See, I've put sugar-plums on his coat for fancy buttons, sugared his shirt-frill, and put on a red almond to his hat-front.
- "There spoke the real British scorn," she said, sugaring her tea, "the fine British contempt for every other nation."
To make (something unpleasant) seem less so.
- She has a gift for sugaring what would otherwise be harsh words.
- He also published the "Weekly Recorder," an indefinite title, which was his way of sugaring what soon became in the region where it was published, Mt. Pleasant, Ohio, a very bitter pill.
- She shook her head sadly at him. "No, it won't do, Arthur. I'm not in a mood to be sugared."
In making maple sugar, to complete the process of boiling down the syrup till it is thick…
In making maple sugar, to complete the process of boiling down the syrup till it is thick enough to crystallize; to approach or reach the state of granulation; with the preposition off.
- A long time ago my grandmother and I used to boil maple sap. When she sugared off, I stood there.
- During the spring in Quebec and Ontario, maple syrup is harvested, or "sugared off," a process which is usually celebrated as a social event.
To apply sugar to trees or plants in order to catch moths.
- Some entomologists assert that it is useless to sugar when ivy is in bloom.
- The latter are best taken by "sugaring" — painting patches of mixed beer and sugar on a series of tree trunks, and making several rounds at twilight with a lantern and a cyanide bottle.
- Sugaring attracts some species of moth that do not readily come to light.
To rewrite (source code) using syntactic sugar.
- You can sugar the syntax of constants thus: […]
- Sure, you could sugar the latter to look like the former (effectively implementing closures as objects), but it seems simpler to just allow the former.
To compliment (a person).
To remove hair using a paste of sugar, water, and lemon juice.
Minced oath of shit.
- Oh, sugar!
- "Oh, sugar! I suppose that's so," reflected Tobias, filling his pipe.
radiotelephony clear-code word for the letter S.
A surname.
The neighborhood
Derived
10x sugar, acid of sugar, acorn sugar, ambered sugar, amino sugar, aminosugar, anhydro sugar, anhydrosugar, anhydrous sugar, animal sugar, antisugar, aphis-sugar, arsenosugar, a spoonful of sugar helps the medicine go down, a spoonful of sugar makes the medicine go down, as sweet as sugar, azasugar, azidosugar, baker's sugar, banded sugar ant, Barbados sugar, barley sugar, barley-sugar, bar sugar, bastard sugar, beechwood sugar, beetroot sugar, beet sugar, beet-sugar, berry sugar, besugar, birch sugar, black sugar, blanch sugar, blood sugar, blown sugar, boiled sugar, booger sugar, brain sugar, bromosugar · +492 more
Vish — recursive loop
A definitional loop anchored at sugar. 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 sugar. 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 sugar
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