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rind
1[rahynd]
noun
a thick and firm outer coat or covering, as of certain fruits, cheeses, and meats.
watermelon rind; orange rind; bacon rind.
the bark of a tree.
rind
2[rahynd, rind]
noun
a piece of iron running across an upper millstone as a support.
rind
/ ɪԻ /
noun
a hard outer layer or skin on bacon, cheese, etc
the outer layer of a fruit or of the spore-producing body of certain fungi
the outer layer of the bark of a tree
Other 51Թ Forms
- rindless adjective
- rindy adjective
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of rind1
Origin of rind2
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of rind1
Example Sentences
She makes great round nests of leaves and teaches her offspring to eat wood-boring insect larvae and fruit, using those rodent-like incisors to break through hard skins or rinds to the sweet flesh inside.
Also, definitely add a Parmegiano-Reggiano rind, if you have one on hand.
A lemon, still hanging from a tree, appeared to have boiled, its juices bubbling over the rind.
In 2022, the consortium began introducing tracking chips, no larger than a grain of rice, as part of the label embedded in the hard rind of the cheese.
Rumphius identified the fruit's tough outer skin as the source of its pungency, noting how the people of Indonesia's Ambon Island had a habit of disposing of the noxious rinds on the shoreline.
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