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toast "

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    • \ ˈtōst 

    • \ ˈtō-stər 

    • \ ˈmel-bə- \

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    [Noun]  | "toast" | \ ˈtōst \


    1: sliced bread browned on both sides by heat

    2: food prepared with toasted bread

    3: an act of proposing a drink in honor of or of drinking in honor of someone or something


    Origin: 15th century ;

     Middle English toste, toost, noun derivative of tosten "to {see: |toast:2|toast:2}"; (sense 2) noun derivative of {see: |toast:3|toast:3};

      * Note : The word toast in the sense "a person who is honored with a drink and wishes for good health or prosperity," with the accompanying verb "to propose or drink to (a person) as a toast," first appears in print at the very end of the seventeenth century. The conventional assumption is that the use is metaphorical, "the name of a lady being supposed to flavour a bumper like a spiced toast in the drink," as it is expressed in the Oxford English Dictionary, first edition. This is pure speculation, however, as the origin of the sense remains obscure. Two oft-quoted explanations appear in Richard {steele|Steele:b}'s journal The Tatler, which appeared between April, 1709 and January, 1711. The first is in No. 24 (June 4, 1709), probably written by Joseph {addison|Addison:b}: "To know what a toast is in the country gives as much perplexity as she herself does in town: and indeed the learned differ very much upon the original of this word, and the acceptation of it among the moderns. … But many of the wits of the last age will assert that the word, in its present sense, was known among them in their youth, and had its rise from an accident in the town of Bath, in the reign of King Charles the Second. It happen'd, that on a publick day a celebrated beauty of those times was in the Cross Bath, and one of the croud of her admirers took a glass of the water in which the fair one stood, and drank her health to the company. There was in the place a gay fellow half fuddled who offered to jump in, and swore tho' he liked not the liquor, he would have the toast [alluding to a drink with toast dipped in it]. He was opposed in his resolution; yet this whim gave foundation to the present honour which is done to the lady we mention in our liquors, who has ever since been called a toast." Another allusion to an origin, in No. 31 (June 21, 1709) by Richard Steele, makes no mention of the earlier story: "Then, said he [a gentleman in the country unfamiliar with the word], why do you call live people toasts? I answered, that was a new name found out by the wits, to make a lady have the same effect as burridge [borage, used as a garnish or ingredient in cordials] in a glass, when a man is drinking." As both Addison and Steele were capable of mixing fact with invention, these anecdotes should probably not be taken too seriously.;

    [Noun]  | "toast*er" | \ ˈtō-stər \


    1: something or someone that toasts; especially : an electrical appliance for toasting


    Origin: 1582 ;

     {see: |toast:2|toast:2} + {see: |-er:2|-er:2};

    [Noun]  | "avocado toast" 


    1: toast topped with sliced or mashed avocado


    Origin: 1928 ;

    [Noun]  | "French toast" 


    1: bread dipped in a mixture of egg and milk and sautéed


    Origin: 1844 ;

    [Noun]  | "mel*ba toast" | \ ˈmel-bə- \


    1: very thin crisp toast


    Origin: 1925 ;

     Nellie Melba;

    [Verb]  | "toast" 


    1: to make (food, such as bread) crisp, hot, and brown by heat

    2: to warm thoroughly

    3: to become toasted; especially : to warm thoroughly


    Origin: 14th century ;

     Middle English tosten "to darken by heat, crisp and darken bread by heat," borrowed from Anglo-French toster, tostir (also continental Old French), going back to Late Latin tostāre "to roast, grill," frequentative derivative of Latin torrēre, past participle tostus (going back to *torsetos) "to heat so as to dry, scorch, parch, (of food) roast" {mat|thirst:1|};

    [Verb]  | "toast" 


    1: to propose or drink to as a toast


    Origin: 1700 ;

     Derivative of {see: |toast:1|toast:1} (sense 2c);

    [Idiom]  | "(as) warm as toast" 


    1: comfortably or pleasantly warm

    [Idiom]  | "be toast" 


    1: to be in a lot of trouble : to be completely ruined, defeated, etc.

    [Idiom]  | "propose a toast" 


    1: to wish a person future health, happiness, and success and ask others to raise their glasses and join in a drink

    [Noun]  | "toast" 


    [Verb]  | "toast" 


    1: to cause to have or give off heat to a moderate degree;


      * e.g., " ... come over and toast your toes by the fire "





     [ "toast" ]

    1: toast is food and food is food, food is also toast which means toast is food and food is toast so food is food.

      * e.g.,  ... do you want toast it is food, and food is toast and food is not toast but is toast. 

     [ "toast" ]

    1: gun(s)- because if you don't walk aoun at night with a gun in most cities, you're toast

      * e.g.,  ... "We don't go nowhere without toast, we thugged out" - 50 Cent's "Wanksta" 

     [ "toast" ]

    1: 1: carbonised bread

      * e.g.,  ... A toast to bread! For without bread there would be no toast! 


     [ "toast" ]

    2: 2: to raise your glass to someone/something

     [ "toast" ]

    1: one of the most frivalous foods, found among the jolly lands of the commoner.

      * e.g.,  ... Alex: "hey man, you wanna go get some toast?" 


     [ "toast" ]

    2: bread after it comes out of the toaster becomes toast.

      * e.g.,  ... Gregg: "yeah, dude toast is the shit." 

     [ "toast" ]

    1: A group of 2 or more males sit in a circle and jerk off on to a piece of toast.The last to ejaculate on the toast hast to eat it.This is called the game of "Toast".

      * e.g.,  ... We had a party and played toast last nite, Paul ate the toast. 

     [ "toast" ]

    1: Toast was a pointless invention from the Dark Ages. Toast wa an implement of torture that caused all those subjected to it to regurgitate in verbal from the sins and crimes of their past lives. Toast was a ritual item devoured by fetishists in the belief that it would enhance their kinetic and sexual powers. Toast cannot be explained by any rational means.

      * e.g.,  ... We used toast to sway the natives 


     [ "toast" ]

    2: Toast is me.


     [ "toast" ]

    3: I am toast.


     [ "toast" ]

    4: ----Form Oryx and Crake by Margaret Atwood

     [ "toast" ]

    1: Urban expession of a series of guns.

      * e.g.,  ... "We don' go nowhere without toast, we thugged out." 50 Cent Wanksta 


     [ "toast" ]

    2: a.k.a. heat

     [ "toast" ]

    1: To spread butter on a piece of bread. Before the first toaster was invented Irma Toastoffski of Salem Mass. accidentally dropped some shaken cream (or butter) onto a loaf of freshly baked bread. After much debate as to whether the concoction was poisonous or not, she tried a slice of the bread and discovered that not only was it not poison, but was in fact, delicious!

      * e.g.,  ... "Toast witch, toast!" Father Jammison bit into his secret slice of buttered bread with sinful gusto and proclaimed, "God save my wretched soul, but this is the best damn toast I've ever eaten!" 


     [ "toast" ]

    2: Irma distributed the wonderful new pastry to her neighbors, but the superstitious Puritans accused her of witchcraft. Irma was slathered in butter and burned alive with her bread while the villagers chanted "Toast witch, toast!!"


     [ "toast" ]

    3: Still, buttered bread became a huge underground success in the colonies and soon spread across the world. The rest is history.

     [ "toast" ]

    1: A euphemism for sexual bedroom activities including copulation and ocasional fisting.

      * e.g.,  ... Awkward Boy: Do you want to come back to my room for toast? Emotionally turmoiled girl: Nah mate- got a 9am. 

     [ "toast" ]

    1: Toast cannot be explained by any rational means.

      * e.g.,  ... toast, grain, food, flour, sliced bread 

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