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Definition of Change taste
1. Verb. Alter the flavor of.
Specialized synonyms: Dulcify, Dulcorate, Edulcorate, Sweeten, Bitter, Acetify, Acidify, Acidulate, Sour
Lexicographical Neighbors of Change Taste
Literary usage of Change taste
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. American Physical Education Review by American Physical Education Association (1920)
"Automatic and economical in operation. Employs no chemicals. Does not change
taste, color or temperature of water. The experience and recommendations of our ..."
2. Elegant Extracts; Or, The Literary Nosegay: Consisting of Selections in Prose by François La Rochefoucauld (1814)
"It is as common for men to change taste, as it is urn -,:,' them to change their
inclination* A good taste is the effect of judgment more than underst \Ve ..."
3. Therapeutic Gazette (1898)
"With this change taste and appetite are restored toward normal. Constipation becomes
lessened and in some cases disappears, and the stools become biliary ..."
4. The Principles of Grammar: Being a Compendions Treatise on the Languages by Solomon Barrett (1860)
"Compliance, consonant, associate, provide, to fall in, disgust, plead, etc., require "
with." Call, wait, change, taste ..."
5. The Church at Home and Abroad by Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A., Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A, General Assembly (1888)
"Chief among the causes which combine to change taste, character and habit is the
intermingling of population from every quarter of the globe. ..."
6. Pen Pictures of Popular English Preachers: With Limnings of Listeners in by John Ross Dix (1852)
"... and then we will believe that religion has a tendency to destroy or change
taste, but not till then. Eleven o'clock is indicated on the face of the Hall ..."