different between delectable vs appetising
delectable
English
Etymology
From Middle French délectable, from Medieval Latin delectare (“to delight”).
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /d??l?kt?b?l/, [d??l?kt?b??]
Adjective
delectable (comparative more delectable, superlative most delectable)
- Highly pleasing; delightful, especially to any of the senses; delicious.
- For quotations using this term, see Citations:delectable.
Synonyms
- See also Thesaurus:delicious
Derived terms
Translations
Noun
delectable (plural delectables)
- Something that is delectable.
Translations
delectable From the web:
- what delectable means
- what delectable in tagalog
- what does delectable
- what does delectable mean in a sentence
- what do delectable mean
- what does delectable mean in latin
- what do delectable
- what does delectable person mean
appetising
English
Adjective
appetising (comparative more appetising, superlative most appetising)
- (chiefly British spelling) Alternative spelling of appetizing.
Verb
appetising
- present participle of appetise
appetising From the web:
- appetising meaning
- what does appetising mean
- what is appetising food
- what are appetising dishes
- what do appetising mean
- what makes food appetising
- what does not appetising mean
- what rhymes with appetising
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