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Definition of Baking hot
1. Adjective. As hot as if in an oven.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Baking Hot
Literary usage of Baking hot
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Boston Cooking-school Cook Book by Fannie Merritt Farmer (1896)
"If wanted glazed, brush over with beaten egg be fore baking. Hot Cross Buns.
1 cup scalded milk. % teaspoon cinnamon. }4 cup sugar. 3 cups flour. ..."
2. Mexico, the Wonderland of the South by William English Carson (1909)
"Fortunately, passengers are not obliged to pass a night there but can remain
comfortably asleep in the Pullman car.1 The day had been baking hot, ..."
3. The Living Age by Making of America Project, Eliakim Littell, Robert S. Littell (1889)
"... since the vines were not in leaf — looked baking hot. I had found a tolerably
cool corner of the ship, and was amusing myself with a copy of " Don ..."
4. The Quarterly Review by William Gifford, George Walter Prothero, John Gibson Lockhart, John Murray, Whitwell Elwin, John Taylor Coleridge, Rowland Edmund Prothero Ernle, William Macpherson, William Smith (1889)
"But the thin-walled, slated-roofed, new cottages are places of continual torture ;
cold in the winter, and in summer ' baking ' hot. ..."
5. A Library of American Literature from the Earliest Settlement to the Present by Arthur Stedman, Edmund Clarence Stedman (1894)
"... woke up; dull pain and increasing heat in the back of his head; pillow baking
hot, and hot all over; not another wink till morning. Then came a short, ..."