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skewer

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skewer

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++朗文当代英语 5++LDOCE 5++朗文 5++
Related topics: Utensils
skew·er1 /ˈskjuːə $ -ər/ noun [countable]  DFUa long metal or wooden stick that is put through pieces of meat to hold them together while they are cooked 〔金属或木质的〕串肉扦,烤肉扦
Examples from the Corpus
skewerSteam 8 minutes, or until a skewer easily slips in and out of the thickest part of the fish.Pierce grapes with a skewer or needle to allow them to absorb rum.Place one cake on a serving plate, spike all over with a skewer and lace with half the kirsch.Thread the fruit on to 8 small skewers.Order the beef teriyaki skewers or lobster chao on sugar cane sticks.Cut the sausages in half through the middle and push each half on the end of a wooden skewer.
Related topics: Cooking
skewer2 verb [transitive]  1. DFCHOLEto make a hole through a piece of food, an object etc with a skewer or with some other pointed object 〔用烤肉扦或类似东西〕把串起来2 to criticize someone very strongly, often in a way that other people find humorous 讽刺,讥讽 Du Bois skewered Washington’s policies in his book, ‘The Souls of Black Folks’. 杜波伊斯在他《黑人的灵魂》一书中讽刺了美国政府的政策。
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Examples from the Corpus
skewerAnd every time I open the curtains, my conscience is skewered.This piece of wood passes right through Turnbull, so that he is skewered.If you skewered a Huey on a sharp stump during an assault, it was pilot error.How she would have skewered all this passing fuss with her incisive wit!Embedded in the wood, it momentarily skewered him to the window-frame.All filmmakers that have done that have gotten skewered over and over and over.Simon skewers the Rolling Stones in their old age in her song, "The Reason."They nibbled chunks of Cheddar cheese skewered with toothpicks.This is a good thing because, even if you could, further impacts might well drive them inwards, skewering your lungs.
Origin skewer1 (1400-1500) Perhaps from skiver skewer ((15-19 centuries))
skew·er1 nounskewer2 verbChineseSyllable
metal or wooden a stick Corpus that long


skewer
I
skewer1 /ˈskjuːə $ -ər/ noun [countable]
 Date: 1400-1500
 Origin: Perhaps from skiver 'skewer' (15-19 centuries)
a long metal or wooden stick that is put through pieces of meat to hold them together while they are cooked

II
skewer2 verb [transitive]
1. to make a hole through a piece of food, an object etc with a skewer or with some other pointed object
2. to criticize someone very strongly, often in a way that other people find humorous:
    Du Bois skewered Washington’s policies in his book, ‘The Souls of Black Folks’.


skew·erBrE /ˈskjuːə(r)/ 🔊NAmE /ˈskjuːər/ 🔊 nouna long thin pointed piece of metal or wood that is pushed through pieces of meat, vegetables, etc. to hold them together while they are cooking, or used to test whether sth is completely cooked (烹饪用)扦子,串肉扦
skew·erBrE /ˈskjuːə(r)/ 🔊NAmE /ˈskjuːər/ 🔊 verbpresent simple - I / you / we / they skewer BrE /ˈskjuːə(r)/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈskjuːər/ 🔊present simple - he / she / it skewers BrE /ˈskjuːəz/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈskjuːərz/ 🔊past simple skewered BrE /ˈskjuːəd/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈskjuːərd/ 🔊past participle skewered BrE /ˈskjuːəd/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈskjuːərd/ 🔊 -ing form skewering BrE /ˈskjuːərɪŋ/ 🔊 NAmE /ˈskjuːərɪŋ/ 🔊~ sth to push a skewer or other thin pointed object through sth 用扦子串住