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  • Hi, everybody, Welcome back to top words.

  • My name is Alicia, and today we're going to talk about 10 words for desserts.

  • So let's no sweet.

  • The first word is sweet, sweet.

  • So sweet is that sugary flavor that you have in your mouth when you eat something that has, I don't know natural sweet flavors?

  • I guess so.

  • For example, like fruits, many fruits have of natural sweetness, like apples or oranges, have a sweet flavor on dhe.

  • Then there is artificial sweetness, like when you put sugar actual sugar into like cakes or cookies.

  • For example, there's that sugary flavor.

  • Um, we call that sweet that is a sweet flavor and a sentence.

  • I want to eat something sweet, decadent.

  • The next word is decadent.

  • Decadent is a word that we use to describe something that is like super selfish.

  • It's like it's like, ridiculous.

  • It's kind of like crazy.

  • How indulgent how, like, selfishly delicious something is.

  • We use it a lot for desserts, so we use it for things that are maybe very, very rich.

  • Ah, which we'll talk about some of these words later, so we'll use it for things that have, like a really, really strong, rich, deep flavor.

  • Maybe they have a high fat content or a high sugar content.

  • Maybe they have lots of cream, whatever.

  • Something that seems like it's just the super selfish just oh, it's just too much that we can use the word decadent for that.

  • So in ascendance, this pie is absolutely decadent rich.

  • So the next word is rich, rich.

  • We can use the word rich for foods beyond desserts is not on Lee for desserts, but it is a very common word we use for desserts.

  • So rich means like a very deep flavor.

  • It's often applied with, like, chocolates or creams, so it has kind of like an image of maybe, um, some fat, for example, s So it's It kind of has more of like an adult desert image.

  • Some so examples of things that are not rich are like popsicles, which is just like sugar and flavor and water, like typical, like citrusy Candies aren't really rich.

  • They're very sweet but not rich.

  • So we use this for, like chocolate cakes, maybe, or pies or puddings, custards, maybe so, something that has, like, kind of a fatty, been deep flavor about it in a sentence.

  • I prefer rich desserts.

  • That's true savory.

  • The next word is savory.

  • Savory is another word that we can use to talk about food that is, well, not sweet.

  • We can use Avery for other things, like meets, but four desserts.

  • Savory means something that has a rich flavor, but that tends more to be salty.

  • So something that has a strong flavour not necessarily fatty like rich but savory, refers to something that has that has a flavor the like a strong flavor that is not from sweetness, but something that a savory is.

  • I don't know, like I heard one time of like a bacon doughnut, for example, like maybe that's like a savory thing.

  • I did not eat the bacon donut, but that could be an example.

  • So something that is savoury is flavorful without being overly sweet in ascendance.

  • Uh, I feel like eating something savory, crispy.

  • The next word is crispy, crispy refers to a texture, so the feeling of of food in your mouth when you eat it is like the texture.

  • That's what I mean by texture.

  • Here, crispy is something that when you bite into it, it makes like that kind of crunchy sounder.

  • It makes um, like, for example, if you imagine eating like a cracker, for example, the weight kind of crumbles into your mouth.

  • Or if you eat something that's like, really like is really, really light, like maybe a potato chip as well could be depending on the chip could be kind of crispy, so something that has often these air kind of like fried things.

  • Or maybe they're for desserts like a wafer could be very crispy.

  • So something that that kind of crumbles in your mouth a little bit.

  • It has sort of a pleasant texture about it.

  • That's something crispy, crispy, so in a sentence, this wafer is nice and crispy smooth.

  • The next word is smooth, smooth, so smooth means it's free of any clumps or lumps, others by free.

  • I mean, there are no lumps.

  • They're in no clumps.

  • So we use this, for example, to talk about like puddings or like a pie filling, maybe, or perhaps a cake as well.

  • So something that is really smooth means like there's everything is the same consistency.

  • There are no like spots of, I don't know.

  • There are no like hard pieces and you're putting.

  • I don't know.

  • There's nothing kind of strange or different in the mixture.

  • In the desert mixture, everything is very smooth and consistent.

  • It is all the same.

  • So smooth is a good thing.

  • Typically for desserts in a sentence, this movie is so smooth you have cakey.

  • The next word is cakey, cakey.

  • Cakey can mean a good thing or a bad thing.

  • Like if something.

  • If, for example, you are eating pudding and you describe it as cakey, that's a bad thing.

  • Uh, cakey should be used positively to talk about a food that should be cakey.

  • So, in other words, a cake or a muffin or something that is cake like maybe even bread to some extent, like a sweet bread could be cakey.

  • So cakey means cake like it's similar to cake, so maybe it's kind of fluffy.

  • It's a little bit moist.

  • Cakey refers to things that are similar to cake, So if you use it like to talk about internal something that is not cake.

  • It sounds like it's a negative thing.

  • So, like, for example, I've heard the word cakey is used some time to refer to makeup that is applied incorrectly.

  • So if you apply makeup incorrectly, it can look.

  • Take E.

  • By that it means it looks like cake on a person's face you can see like maybe like frosting.

  • You can think of that.

  • It looks like cake.

  • It's a bad thing.

  • In that case, Ah, person's makeup should not look like cake.

  • Probably bad thing there, however, to talk about a muffin.

  • Oh, it's cell cakey and delicious.

  • Good thing.

  • So think about the situation where the word cakey is applied in ascendance.

  • These muffins are pleasantly cakey, moist.

  • Next word is moist, moist means it has moister.

  • It has water.

  • There is like a sense of liquid.

  • The opposite of moist is dry, so dry is typically a bad thing.

  • In deserts, we typically don't want dry deserts.

  • Moist means it has liquid.

  • It has moisture.

  • There's and it's a good thing, typically to have like a slightly slightly moist cake.

  • If you have like a super moist cake, it turns into I don't know, pour into something that's bad, but usually I'm some kind of moistness in your dessert, like a pie or a cake is seen as positive.

  • So moist, moist is typically positive in a sentence.

  • This cake is so moist, creamy, the next word is creamy, creamy.

  • The route there is cream, so something that uses a lot of cream in a nice way, usually so we can also use creamy for like sauces, too.

  • So, like a pasta sauce can be very creamy or other foods can be creamy.

  • Um, but basically it means that a lot of cream or the sensation the taste of cream is in your mouth, and it is pleasant, so it's typically used positively.

  • I suppose it could be used negatively.

  • Like spaghetti sauce is creamy and weird.

  • I don't know.

  • I don't know.

  • Maybe you can think of a creative way to use creamy in a negative way.

  • But creamy typically is a good thing for dessert.

  • So in a sentence, gelato is very creamy, fruity.

  • Okay, the last word is fruity, fruity, eso fruity.

  • The route here is fruit, obviously, so something which has a flavor like fruit.

  • It tastes like fruit, for example.

  • So, um, lots of desserts use fruit as a main ingredient because fruits have natural sweetness.

  • So many deserts are fruity beers or fruity as well.

  • Wyness Fruity.

  • Too many other types of food are fruity.

  • You can use this word outside of the realm of desserts.

  • If you live in a sentence, I like fruity desserts.

  • All right.

  • Those are 10 words for desserts.

  • I hope that you found something to describe your favorite delicious street.

  • If you have a different word, I don't know.

  • Do you have something else that you like to use to describe a dessert?

  • If you do, let us know in the comments for sure.

  • If you like the video, please give us a thumbs up.

  • Um, you can check us out in English class 11 dot com.

  • For other stuff like this, you can find some other like vocabulary lists.

  • Talk about food other than desserts there as well Subscribe to the Channel Two If you have Not already.

  • So thanks very much for watching this episode of tough words.

  • And I will see you again soon.

  • Come, come.

  • This is how I eat desserts.

  • Okay.

  • The next word is cakey.

  • Cakey.

  • So it's here, Like, excited about it over their hunger.

  • Do you do?

  • Do you like rich?

  • Yeah.

  • Riches get really fat.

  • Great work.

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英語でデザートを表す10の単語 (10 Words for Desserts in English)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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