Search for: milk
1081 The Hero, p. 239.3 (Ellen Gould White)
… with milk and honey. He could break the power of the hated Romans. He could heal the soldiers wounded in battle. He could supply whole armies with food. He could …
1082 The Mission, p. 140.4 (Ellen Gould White)
… with milk and not with solid food,” he explained later, “for until now you were not able to receive it, and even now you are still not able” ( 1 Corinthians 3:2 ). Many Corinthian …
1083 The Mission, p. 172.3 (Ellen Gould White)
“Who ever goes to war at his own expense? Who plants a vineyard and does not eat of its fruit? Or who tends a flock and does not drink of the milk of the flock? ...
1084 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. ABLACTATE.1 (Noah Webster)
ABLACTATE, v.t. [L. ablacto; from ab and lac, milk.] to wean from the breast. [Little used.]
1085 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. ABLACTATION.1 (Noah Webster)
ABLACTATION, n. [L. ab and lae, milk. Lacto, to suckle.]
1086 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. AMYGDALATE.2 (Noah Webster)
AMYGDALATE, n. An emulsion made of almonds; milk of almonds.
1087 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. APPETENCE.6 (Noah Webster)
4. According to Darwin, animal appetency is synonymous with irritability or sensibility; as the appetency of the eye for light, of the pops to secrete milk, etc.
1088 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. ASTRAGAL.5 (Noah Webster)
4. In botany, the wood pea; the milk vetch; the liquorice vetch.
1089 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. BIESTINGS.1 (Noah Webster)
BIESTINGS, n. plu. The first milk given by a cow after calving.
1090 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. BIGUDDERED.2 (Noah Webster)
Having large udders, or udders swelled with milk.
1091 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. BLANC-MANGER.1 (Noah Webster)
BLANC-MANGER, pron. blomonge. In cookery, a preparation of dissolved isinglass, milk, sugar, cinnamon, etc., boiled into a thick consistence, and garnished for the table with blanched almonds.
1092 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. BONNY-CLABBER.2 (Noah Webster)
It is used, in America, for any milk that is turned or become thick in the process of souring, and applied only to that part which is thick.
1093 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. BOOLEY.1 (Noah Webster)
BOOLEY, n. In Ireland, one who has not settled habitation, but wanders from place to place, with his flocks and herds, living on their milk, like the Tartars.
1094 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. BREAST.2 (Noah Webster)
1. The soft, protuberant body, adhering to the thorax, which, in females, furnishes milk for infants.
1095 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. BREAST.3 (Noah Webster)
His breasts are full of milk. Job 21:24 .
1096 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. BUTTER.1 (Noah Webster)
BUTTER, n. [L. butyrum.] An oily substance obtained from cream or milk by churning. Agitation separates the fat or oily part of milk from the thin or serous part, called butter-milk.
1097 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. BUTTER-MILK.1 (Noah Webster)
BUTTER-MILK, n. The milk that remains after the butter is separated from it. Johnson calls this whey; but whey is the thin part of the milk after the curd or cheese is separated. Butter-milk in America is not called whey.
1098 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. BUTTERWORT.1 (Noah Webster)
… ; and milk, in which these are steeped, or washed, acquires, in a day or two, consistency, and is an agreeable food, used in the north of Sweden.
1099 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. BUTTERY.2 (Noah Webster)
BUTTERY, n. An apartment in a house, where butter, milk, provisions and utensils are kept. In some colleges, a room where liquors, fruit and refreshments are kept for sale to the students.
1100 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. CACHINNATION.1 (Noah Webster)
… , usually milk white, some times grayish or yellowish white; opake or slightly translucent at the edges. Its fracture is even, or conchoidal with large cavities …