dough
/dəʊ/ (bre, ipa) · /dəʊ/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈdō/ (ame, mw)
dough — 名詞
- doughsingular
- doughsplural
1. a thick, soft mixture prepared by combining flour with water, milk, or another l
麵糰
麵粉加水揉成的柔軟混合物
a thick, soft mixture prepared by combining flour with water, milk, or another liquid, used as the base for bread, pastries, pizza crusts, and other baked goods before they are cooked.
The baker kneaded the dough until it was smooth and elastic.
麵包師傅反覆揉捏麵糰,直到它變得光滑又有彈性。
knead the dough — the action of pressing and folding
Adina left the dough to rise in a warm bowl near the stove.
Adina 把麵糰放在爐子旁一個溫暖的碗裡,讓它發酵。
leave the dough to rise — letting it expand before baking
The pizza chef tossed the dough high in the air to stretch it thin.
披薩師傅把麵糰高高拋起,在空中拉薄。
Before shaping the rolls, Yuna dusted the dough with extra flour.
Yuna 在整型之前先在麵糰上撒了一些麵粉。
Jin rolled the cookie dough flat and cut it into star shapes.
Jin 把做餅乾的麵糰擀平,切成星星形狀。
文法句型
dough + verb (rise, bake)
a/an + adjective + dough
用法筆記
Dough is usually uncountable. You can use 'a' with an adjective to describe a particular type or batch, as in 'a sticky dough' or 'a soft dough.' Do not confuse dough with batter — dough is thick enough to knead, while batter is thin enough to pour.
常見錯誤
2. an informal word for money, especially cash that is earned, saved, needed, or sp
錢;摳摳
非正式用語,指金錢
an informal word for money, especially cash that is earned, saved, needed, or spent in everyday life.
Christopher saved up enough dough to put a down payment on a flat.
Christopher 存夠了摳摳,足以付一間公寓的頭期款。
save up dough — to put money aside over time
The landlord told the tenants they needed the dough by Monday morning.
房東告訴房客們,他們必須在週一早上之前把錢湊齊。
If the tour sells well, the band will make some serious dough.
如果巡演賣得好,這個樂團就能賺到一大筆錢。
Jude spent most of his dough on second-hand camera equipment.
Jude 把大部分的錢都花在買二手相機設備上面了。
文法句型
have/get/make + dough
enough dough + to-infinitive
用法筆記
This meaning belongs to casual, informal speech and slang. It is not appropriate for formal writing, business documents, or academic contexts, where 'money,' 'funds,' or 'cash' should be used instead.