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cheese

English

Pronunciation

  • enPR: ch?z, IPA(key): /t??i?z/
  • (General American) IPA(key): /t??iz/
  • Rhymes: -i?z
  • Homophone: qis

Etymology 1

From Middle English chese, from Old English ??ese, specifically the Anglian form ??se, from Proto-West Germanic *k?s?, borrowed from Latin c?seus. Doublet of queso.

Noun

cheese (countable and uncountable, plural cheeses)

  1. (uncountable) A dairy product made from curdled or cultured milk.
  2. (countable) Any particular variety of cheese.
  3. (countable) A piece of cheese, especially one moulded into a large round shape during manufacture.
  4. (uncountable, Britain) A thick variety of jam (fruit preserve), as distinguished from a thinner variety (sometimes called jelly)
    • 1807 Nutt, F. (1807). The Complete Confectioner: Or, The Whole Art of Confectionary Made Easy: Containing, Among a Variety of Useful Matter, the Art of Making the Various Kinds of Biscuits, Drops ... as Also the Most Approved Method of Making Cheeses, Puddings, Cakes &c. in 250 Cheap and Fashionable Receipts. The Result of Many Years Experience with the Celebrated Negri and Witten. United Kingdom: reprinted, for Richard Scott and sold at his bookstore, no. 243 Pearl-street.
      p.82-3, No.244. Damson Cheese: “Pick the damsons free from stalks···You may make plum or bullace cheese in the same way···”
  5. A substance resembling cream cheese, such as lemon cheese
  6. (uncountable, colloquial) That which is melodramatic, overly emotional, or cliché, i.e. cheesy.
  7. (uncountable, slang) Money.
  8. (countable, Britain) In skittles, the roughly ovoid object that is thrown to knock down the skittles.
  9. (uncountable, slang, baseball) A fastball.
  10. (uncountable, slang) A dangerous mixture of black tar heroin and crushed Tylenol PM tablets. The resulting powder resembles grated cheese and is snorted.
  11. (vulgar, slang) Smegma.
  12. (technology) Holed pattern of circuitry to decrease pattern density.
    • 2006, US Patent 7458053, International Business Machines Corporation
      It is known in the art to insert features that are electrically inactive (“fill structures”) into a layout to increase layout pattern density or and to remove features from the layout (“cheese structures”) to decrease layout pattern density.
  13. A mass of pomace, or ground apples, pressed together in the shape of a cheese.
  14. The flat, circular, mucilaginous fruit of the dwarf mallow (Malva rotundifolia) or marshmallow (Althaea officinalis).
  15. A low curtsey; so called on account of the cheese shape assumed by a woman's dress when she stoops after extending the skirts by a rapid gyration.
Synonyms
  • (product): See Thesaurus:cheese
  • (money): See Thesaurus:money
Antonyms
  • (circuitry): fill (dummy pattern to increase pattern density)
Hyponyms
  • (dairy product): See Thesaurus:cheese
Derived terms
Descendants
  • Tok Pisin: sis
Borrowings
Translations
See also
  • cheese on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
  • Cheese (recreational drug) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
  • butter
  • cream
  • milk
  • turophile
  • yogurt

Verb

cheese (third-person singular simple present cheeses, present participle cheesing, simple past and past participle cheesed)

  1. To prepare curds for making cheese.
  2. (technology) To make holes in a pattern of circuitry to decrease pattern density.
  3. (slang) To smile excessively, as for a camera.
Derived terms
  • cheese up

Interjection

cheese!

  1. (photography) Said while being photographed, to give the impression of smiling.
Derived terms
  • say cheese
Descendants
  • ? Icelandic: sís
  • ? Japanese: ??? (ch?zu)
Translations

Etymology 2

Though commonly claimed to be a borrowing of Persian ???? (??z, thing), the term does not occur earliest in Anglo-Indian sources, but instead is "well recorded in British and Australian sources from the 1840s onwards".

Noun

cheese (uncountable)

  1. (slang) Wealth, fame, excellence, importance.
  2. (slang, dated, British India) The correct thing, of excellent quality; the ticket.
Derived terms
  • big cheese
  • sub-cheese

References

Etymology 3

Etymology unknown. Possibly an alteration of cease.

Verb

cheese (third-person singular simple present cheeses, present participle cheesing, simple past and past participle cheesed)

  1. (slang) To stop; to refrain from.
  2. (slang) To anger or irritate someone, usually in combination with "off".
Derived terms
  • cheese it
  • cheesed off

Etymology 4

From cheesy.

Verb

cheese (third-person singular simple present cheeses, present participle cheesing, simple past and past participle cheesed)

  1. (video games) To use an unsporting tactic; to repeatedly use an attack which is overpowered or difficult to counter.
  2. (video games) To use an unconventional, all-in strategy to take one's opponent by surprise early in the game (especially for real-time strategy games).
Synonyms
  • (use a surprise all-in strategy early in a game): rush, zerg

cheese From the web:

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economics

English

Alternative forms

  • œconomics (archaic)

Etymology

From economy, from Latin oeconomia, from Ancient Greek ????????? (oikonomía, management of a household, administration), from ????? (oîkos, house) + ????? (nómos, management).

Pronunciation

  • (General American, Canada) IPA(key): /?ik??n?m?ks/, /??k??n?m?ks/
  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?i?k??n?m?ks/, /??k??n?m?ks/

Noun

economics (uncountable)

  1. (social sciences) The study of resource allocation, distribution and consumption; of capital and investment; and of management of the factors of production.
    Synonyms: dismal science; see also Thesaurus:economics

Derived terms

  • -nomics

Related terms

  • economy

Translations

Anagrams

  • neocosmic

Ladin

Adjective

economics

  1. masculine plural of economich

Occitan

Adjective

economics

  1. masculine plural of economic

economics From the web:

  • what economics mean
  • what economics is supply and demand
  • what economics is all about
  • what economics major can do
  • what economics teaches you
  • what economics study
  • what economics focuses on determining what should be
  • what economics do
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