piping hot
piping hot — idiom
1. describes food or a drink that has just been cooked or heated and so is steaming
describes food or a drink that has just been cooked or heated and so is steaming and almost too hot to touch or eat.
Owen carried the piping hot pizza straight from the oven to the table.
piping hot + food noun, used before the noun
The waiter brought us bowls of piping hot soup on a freezing night.
collocation: piping hot soup / coffee / stew
Trang blew on her tea because it was still piping hot.
Fresh bread arrived at the bakery counter, piping hot and smelling of butter.
Always serve the dumplings piping hot, or the filling tastes greasy.
- stone-cold
completely cold, often of food left out too long
- lukewarm
only slightly warm, neither hot nor cold
文法句型
piping hot + food/drink noun
serve/arrive piping hot
用法筆記
Almost always describes food or drink; you would not say a person or the weather is piping hot. Frequently follows 'serve', 'arrive', or 'come'.