rasher
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++LDOCE 5++rash·er /ˈræʃə $ -er/ noun [countable] British English DFFa thin piece of bacon or ham 熏肉片;火腿片rasher of a rasher of bacon 一片培根► see thesaurus at piece
Examples from the Corpus
rasher• Cover the sausage completely, then wrap around with a bacon rasher.• But she couldn't live on satsumas and the last of the bacon rashers until after Christmas.• Stretch the bacon rashers using the back of a knife.• Line a terrine with bacon rashers leaving an overlap for the top.• Others chased rashers round the plate with a vague air of disenchantment.• I sampled the oak-smoked back - quite the most succulent, aromatic and potentially habit-forming rasher I have ever had.• Emily Mahon stood in front of the gas cooker and grilled the ten rashers that she served every morning except Friday.rash·er nounChineseSyllable
thin of Corpus bacon or piece ham a
rasher
rash‧er /ˈræʃə $ -er/
noun [countable] British English
a thin piece of bacon or ham
rasher of
a rasher of bacon
▪ piece an amount of something that has been cut or separated from the main part: Could I have another piece of cake? | a piece of broken glass | Emma cut the pie into eight pieces.
▪bit a piece. Bit is more informal than piece and is often used about smaller pieces: The notes were written on bits of paper. | He threw a bit of wood onto the fire.
▪lump a small piece of something solid or firm that does not have a regular shape: two lumps of sugar | a lump of coal | a lump of clay
▪scrap a small piece of paper, cloth etc that is no longer needed: I wrote the phone number on a scrap of paper. | The dog was eating scraps of food off the floor.
▪strip a long narrow piece of cloth, paper etc: a strip of cloth | The leather had been cut into strips.
▪sheet a thin flat piece of something such as paper, glass, or metal: a blank sheet of paper | a sheet of aluminium
▪slice a thin flat piece of bread, cake, meat etc cut from a larger piece: a slice of pizza | Cut the tomatoes into thin slices.
▪chunk a piece of something solid that does not have a regular shape – used especially about food, rock, or metal: The fruit was cut into large chunks. | a chunk of bread
▪hunk a large piece with rough edges, which has been cut or has broken off a bigger piece of food, rock etc: a big hunk of cheese | hunks of concrete
▪block a piece of something solid, which has straight sides: concrete blocks | a block of cheese | a block of ice
▪slab a thick flat piece of stone, or of cake, meat etc: The floor had been made from stone slabs. | a slab of beef
▪cube a piece that has six square sides – used especially about food: a cube of sugar | ice cubes
▪wedge a piece that has a thick end and a pointed end, and is shaped like a triangle – used especially about food and metal: a wedge of cheese
▪bar a block of soap, chocolate, candy, or metal, which has straight sides: a chocolate bar | a bar of soap | gold bars worth more than £26 million
▪rasher British English a slice of bacon: I usually have two rashers of bacon for breakfast.
rash‧er /ˈræʃə $ -er/
noun [countable] British Englisha thin piece of bacon or ham
rasher of
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