different between yeasty vs yeast

yeasty

English

Etymology

From yeast +? -y.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?ji?sti/
  • Rhymes: -i?sti

Adjective

yeasty (comparative yeastier, superlative yeastiest)

  1. Having or resembling yeast.
  2. Foamy and frothy.
    • 1819, Lord Byron, Don Juan, III.58:
      The Ocean when its yeasty war is waging / Is awful to the vessel near the rock [...].
  3. Emotionally bubbling over (as with exuberance)
  4. Trivial.
    • 1602 : William Shakespeare, Hamlet, act V scene 2
      Thus has he, and many more of the same breed that I
      know the drossy age dotes on, only got the tune of the
      time and, out of an habit of encounter, a kind of
      yeasty collection, which carries them through and
      through the most profane and winnowed opinions

Translations

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yeast

English

Etymology

From Middle English yest, yeest, gest, gist, from Old English ?ist, ?yst, from Proto-West Germanic *jestu, from Proto-Germanic *jestuz. Cognate with Saterland Frisian Jääst (yeast), West Frisian gêst, gist (yeast), Dutch gist (yeast), German Low German Gest (yeast), German Gischt (sea foam), Swedish jäst (yeast), Norwegian jest (yeast), Icelandic jöstur (yeast).

Pronunciation

  • enPR: y?st, IPA(key): /ji?st/
  • (rare) IPA(key): /i?st/
  • Rhymes: -i?st

Noun

yeast (countable and uncountable, plural yeasts)

  1. An often humid, yellowish froth produced by fermenting malt worts, and used to brew beer, leaven bread, and also used in certain medicines.
  2. A single-celled fungus of a wide variety of taxonomic families.
    1. A true yeast or budding yeast in order Saccharomycetales.
      1. baker's yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae
        1. A compressed cake or dried granules of this substance used for mixing with flour to make bread dough rise.
      2. brewer's yeast, certain species of Saccharomyces, principally Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Saccharomyces carlsbergensis.
    2. Candida, a ubiquitous fungus that can cause various kinds of infections in humans.
      1. The resulting infection, candidiasis.
  3. (figuratively) A frothy foam.
    • 1851, Herman Melville, Moby Dick:
      But what most puzzled and confounded you was a long, limber, portentous, black mass of something hovering in the centre of the picture over three blue, dim, perpendicular lines floating in a nameless yeast.

Derived terms

Translations

See also

  • leaven
  • nutritional yeast

Verb

yeast (third-person singular simple present yeasts, present participle yeasting, simple past and past participle yeasted)

  1. To ferment.
  2. (of something prepared with a yeasted dough) To rise.
  3. (African-American Vernacular, slang) To exaggerate

References

Anagrams

  • Yates, Yeats, as yet, teasy, yates, yeats

yeast From the web:

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