Blanch
[blɑːn(t)ʃ] or [blæntʃ]
Definition
(verb.) cook (vegetables) briefly; 'Parboil the beans before freezing them'.
Edited by Kathleen--From WordNet
Definition
(a.) To take the color out of, and make white; to bleach; as, to blanch linen; age has blanched his hair.
(a.) To bleach by excluding the light, as the stalks or leaves of plants, by earthing them up or tying them together.
(a.) To make white by removing the skin of, as by scalding; as, to blanch almonds.
(a.) To whiten, as the surface of meat, by plunging into boiling water and afterwards into cold, so as to harden the surface and retain the juices.
(a.) To give a white luster to (silver, before stamping, in the process of coining.).
(a.) To cover (sheet iron) with a coating of tin.
(a.) Fig.: To whiten; to give a favorable appearance to; to whitewash; to palliate.
(v. i.) To grow or become white; as, his cheek blanched with fear; the rose blanches in the sun.
(v. t.) To avoid, as from fear; to evade; to leave unnoticed.
(v. t.) To cause to turn aside or back; as, to blanch a deer.
(v. i.) To use evasion.
(n.) Ore, not in masses, but mixed with other minerals.
Checker: Monroe
Synonyms and Synonymous
v. a. Bleach, whiten, etiolate, make or render white.
Edited by Barbie
Synonyms and Antonyms
SYN:Bleach, whiten
ANT:Darken, color, obfuscate
Typed by Arlene
Definition
v.t. to whiten.—v.i. to grow white.
Typed by Ann
Examples
- But I was to learn that the Martian smile is merely perfunctory, and that the Martian laugh is a thing to cause strong men to blanch in horror. Edgar Rice Burroughs. A Princess of Mars.
- I like the summer day, whose sun makes fruit blush and corn blanch. Charlotte Bronte. Shirley.
- Blanch the bitter almonds and bruise them in a Wedgwood mortar, adding thereto the glycerine and using the pestle vigorously; a smooth paste is thus obtained. William K. David. Secrets of Wise Men, Chemists and Great Physicians.
- His lip might quiver, and his cheek might blanch, but no expression of fear or concern escaped the lips of that immortal man. Charles Dickens. The Pickwick Papers.
- She drifted forward as if scarcely conscious, her long blanched face lifted up, not to see the world. D. H. Lawrence. Women in Love .
- Stay,' said he, his eye catching on Margaret's face, blanched with watching in a sick room, 'I'm not sure whether I can go; I've a long round to take. Elizabeth Cleghorn Gaskell. North and South.
- Finally the pin was straightened and blanched or whitened. Various. The Wonder Book of Knowledge.
- Here was the secret of her blanched face, her shaken nerves, her peals of hysterical laughter on the next morning. Arthur Conan Doyle. The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes.
- I leaned against a gate, and looked into an empty field where no sheep were feeding, where the short grass was nipped and blanched. Charlotte Bronte. Jane Eyre.
- Justinian gave a cry of alarm, and his face blanched white under its bronze. Fergus Hume. The Island of Fantasy.
- Blanched face, sunken eyes, hollow cheeks, beard of three days' growth, wasted flesh, short thick breath; it was the very ghost of Sikes. Charles Dickens. Oliver Twist.
- The blanching process did not cease in her, and her lips now became as white as her face. Thomas Hardy. The Return of the Native.
Inputed by Cole