taste
to try or test the flavor or quality of (something) by taking some into the mouth: to taste food.
to eat or drink a little of: She barely tasted her dinner.
to eat or drink (often used in negative constructions): He hadn't tasted food for three days.
to perceive or distinguish the flavor of: to taste the wine in a sauce.
to have or get experience, especially a slight experience: these young men who had only begun to taste life.
to perceive in any way.
Archaic. to enjoy or appreciate.
Obsolete.
to examine by touch; feel.
to test or try.
to try the flavor or quality of something.
to eat or drink a little (usually followed by of): She tasted of the cake.
to perceive or distinguish the flavor of anything.
to have experience of something, however limited or slight.
to have a particular flavor (often followed by of): The coffee tastes bitter. The bread tastes of mold.
to smack or savor (usually followed by of): The story tastes of treason.
the act of tasting food or drink.
the sense by which the flavor or savor of things is perceived when they are brought into contact with the tongue.
the sensation or quality as perceived by this sense; flavor.
a small quantity tasted; a morsel, bit, or sip.
a relish, liking, or partiality for something: a taste for music.
the sense of what is fitting, harmonious, or beautiful; the perception and enjoyment of what constitutes excellence in the fine arts, literature, fashion, etc.
the sense of what is seemly, polite, tactful, etc., to say or do in a given social situation.
one's personal attitude or reaction toward an aesthetic phenomenon or social situation, regarded as either good or bad.
the ideas of aesthetic excellence or of aesthetically valid forms prevailing in a culture or personal to an individual: a sample of Victorian taste; I consulted only my own taste in decorating this room.
the formal idiom preferred by a certain artist or culture; style; manner: a façade in the Baroque taste.
a slight experience or a sample of something: a taste of adventure.
a feeling or sensation resulting from an experience: a compromise that left a bad taste in her mouth.
Obsolete. test or trial.
Idioms about taste
taste blood. blood (def. 24).
to one's taste, agreeable or pleasing to one: He couldn't find any ties that were completely to his taste.
Origin of taste
1synonym study For taste
word story For taste
Tasten was borrowed from Old French taster “to touch, try,” from an unrecorded Vulgar Latin verb tastāre (or taxtāre or taxitāre ), which is most likely an alteration of a frequentative verb formed from tangere “to touch, tap, taste (food), lay hands on, affect (with emotion), seize, defraud.” (A frequentative verb is one that expresses repetition of an action).
Though the meaning “to try or examine by touch; to feel” is now obsolete, the current figurative meaning “to have a slight experience of something” has developed from that literal use. And of course the primary meaning “to try the flavor of something” is merely referring to another one of our five senses that is stimulated by food taken into the mouth.
Other words for taste
Opposites for taste
Other words from taste
- tast·a·ble, taste·a·ble, adjective
- pre·taste, noun, verb (used with object), pre·tast·ed, pre·tast·ing.
- re·taste, verb, re·tast·ed, re·tast·ing.
- un·tast·a·ble, adjective
- un·taste·a·ble, adjective
- un·tast·ed, adjective
- un·tast·ing, adjective
Dictionary.com Unabridged Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2024
How to use taste in a sentence
The billionaire philanthropist tastes the product of a machine that processes human sewage into drinking water and electricity.
Bill Gates Drinks Sewer Water | Jack Holmes, The Daily Beast Video | January 7, 2015 | THE DAILY BEASTWhat tastes great to an American consumer may not be what folks in China or India would choose to eat or drink.
In that case the device was to put the genius in opposition to a majority of established cultural tastes and codes.
The French fries are made out of real potatoes, the burger is great and you can get it all kinds of ways, and it tastes good.
Bill Murray’s Words of Wisdom: On Comedy, the Greatness of In-N-Out, and Searching For Great Love | Marlow Stern | October 10, 2014 | THE DAILY BEASTTry explaining what a cucumber tastes like to a 19th century Inuit.
So after a few minutes I remarked to him, "Everything tastes very sweet out of this spoon!"
Music-Study in Germany | Amy FayThis artist is, sui generis, a daughter of the people, of unconventional tastes and habits.
Women in the fine arts, from the Seventh Century B.C. to the Twentieth Century A.D. | Clara Erskine ClementWe were much alike in our tastes and habits, yet there was enough of difference between us to impart a relish to our friendship.
Fifty Years of Railway Life in England, Scotland and Ireland | Joseph TatlowShe was a woman of great intellectual endowment, with highly cultivated literary tastes.
Fifty Years of Railway Life in England, Scotland and Ireland | Joseph TatlowAccustomed to the bustle and hurry of a soldier's life, he was too old to acquire the tastes of a life of tranquillity.
Napoleon's Marshals | R. P. Dunn-Pattison
British Dictionary definitions for taste
/ (teɪst) /
the sense by which the qualities and flavour of a substance are distinguished by the taste buds
the sensation experienced by means of the taste buds
the act of tasting
a small amount eaten, drunk, or tried on the tongue
a brief experience of something: a taste of the whip
a preference or liking for something; inclination: to have a taste for danger
the ability to make discerning judgments about aesthetic, artistic, and intellectual matters; discrimination: to have taste
judgment of aesthetic or social matters according to a generally accepted standard: bad taste
discretion; delicacy: that remark lacks taste
obsolete the act of testing
to distinguish the taste of (a substance) by means of the taste buds
(usually tr) to take a small amount of (a food, liquid, etc) into the mouth, esp in order to test the quality: to taste the wine
(often foll by of) to have a specific flavour or taste: the tea tastes of soap; this apple tastes sour
(when intr, usually foll by of) to have an experience of (something): to taste success
(tr) an archaic word for enjoy
(tr) obsolete to test by touching
Origin of taste
1Derived forms of taste
- tastable, adjective
Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
Other Idioms and Phrases with taste
see acquired taste; dose (taste) of one's own medicine; leave a bad taste in one's mouth; no accounting for tastes; poor taste.
The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary Copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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