| butter |
A solid fat made from churning the fat from milk or cream until it solidifies. It is a water-in-oil emulsion, comprised of over 80% milkfat, but also containing water in the form of tiny droplets, perhaps some milk solids-not-fat, with or without salt (sweet butter); the texture is a result of working/kneading during processing at appropriate temperatures, to establish fat crystalline network that results in desired smoothness (compare butter with melted and recrystallized butter); used as a ...
Ãâó: webexhibits.org/butter/glossary-ab.html
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| butabarbital |
An intermediate-acting barbiturate used in sedative preparations.
Ãâó: ojjdp.ncjrs.org/PUBS/drugid/glossary.html
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| butalbital |
A barbiturate used in various sedative preparations.
Ãâó: ojjdp.ncjrs.org/PUBS/drugid/glossary.html
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| butter |
Fat made from cream and used in cooking or for eating. It comes in a variety of ways including salted, unsalted and whipped.
Ãâó: www.tyson.com/UserControls/ViewTerms.aspx
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| butter |
To apply a quantity of mortar onto a brick, block or stone, often on the small end, prior to it being laid.
Ãâó: www.gravestonepreservation.info/glossary.asp
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| BUT | small marine fish with a short smooth-scaled compressed body and feeble spines |
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| BUT | any of numerous small flat Atlantic food fish having smooth skin |
| BUT | any of various plants of the genus Ranunculus |
| BUT | a swimming stroke in which the arms are thrown forward together out of the water while the feet kick up and down |
| BUT | diurnal insect typically having a slender body with knobbed antennae and broad colorful wings |
| BUT | talk or behave amorously, without serious intentions |
| BUT | cut and spread open, as in preparation for cooking |
| BUT | flutter like a butterfly |
| BUT | tropical shrub having clusters of white or violet or yellow flowers |
| BUT | an entomologist who specializes in the collection and study of butterflies and moths |
| BUT | the phenomenon whereby a small change at one place in a complex system can have large effects elsewhere, e.g., a butterfly flapping its wings in Rio de Janeiro might change the weather in Chicago |
| BUT | small usually brilliantly colored tropical marine fishes having narrow deep bodies with large broad fins |
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