frosting

listen to the pronunciation of frosting
English - Turkish
keklerin üzerine konan şekerli karışım
buz tutarak
dondurma
{f} buz tut
{i} buz tutma
don/dondur
buzlu camın yüzey
{i} keklerin üzerine konulan şekerli karışım
{i} buzlu yüz
{i} şekerli beyaz karışım
frost
don

Bu sabah ağır bir don vardı. - We had a heavy frost this morning.

Don bütün çiçekleri öldürdü. - The frost killed all the flowers.

frost
ayaz

Sonbaharda, günler daha kısaldığında ve geceler daha soğuduğunda, o, ilk ayazın yaprakları parlak sarı ve portakal ve kırmızıya dönüştürmesini izledi. - In the fall, when the days grew shorter and the nights colder, she watched the first frost turn the leaves to bright yellow and orange and red.

Şiddetli bir ayaz bekleniyor. - A heavy frost is expected.

frosting work
iş kumlama
frost
donmak
frost
kırağı ile kaplanmak
frost
buzlanmak
frost
(cam) buzlandırmak
butter cream frosting
(Gıda) tereyağı kreması
frost
{i} başarısızlık
frost
{i} soğukluk
frost
kırağı/ayaz
frost
{f} kırağı çalmak
frost
{i} fiyasko
frost
{f} soğuk davranmak
frost
{f} şekerleme ile kaplamak
frost
{i} do
frost
{i} hayal kırıklığı
frost
{f} buzlamak
frost
{i} soğuk davranış
frost
{f} (keki) şekerli bir karışımla kaplamak
frost
{f} buz tut
frost
{f} kırağı düşmek
frost
{i} kırağı

Genç bitkiler kırağılı havadan korunmalıdır. - Young plants should be protected in frosty weather.

frost
don/dondur
frost
{i} çiğ
English - English
A layer of frost
A sugary coating for cakes and other baked goods

anyhow, even the cake didn't keep very well. I tried it, and it dried up, 'specially the frosting. I reckon the time to take frosting and good times is while they are going; so I want to see all I can now while I'm here.

A way to steal a car
Present participle of to frost
A sugar mixture used on cakes, cookies, pastries, and other baked foods Also called icing Recipe: Wedding Cake Frosting
strands of lightened hair, ends or tips only
An engraving technique which produces a slightly dulled effect on certain parts of a coin's design The effect is produced by lightly sand blasting or etching that part of the design on the die The technique has become popular in the latter half of the 20th century but is rarely used on other than proof, pattern or specimen pieces
Cooked sugar combined with other ingredients to make creamy cover for cakes etc
A lusterless finish of metal or glass; the process of producing such a finish
A composition of sugar and beaten egg, used to cover or ornament cake, pudding, etc
Sugar icing used to cover cakes
A frostlike appearance of a semi-opaque or translucent coating
a glass is frosted by wetting the rim with a wedge of lemon and dipping it in caster sugar
Frosting is a sweet substance made from powdered sugar that is used to cover and decorate cakes. a huge pastry with green frosting on it. a sweet substance put on cakes and made from powdery sugar and butter British Equivalent: icing
a flavored sugar topping used to coat and decorate cakes
{i} sweet coating for spreading on cakes, icing, glaze; act of creating a frosted appearance (on glass); powdered glass flakes used as decoration; highlighting, bleaching or tinting (of the hair)
frost
The cold weather that would cause frost as in (1) to form
frost
A cover of minute ice crystals on objects that are exposed to the air. Some of these are tree branches, plant stems, leaves, wires, poles, vehicles, rooftops, or aircraft skin. Frost is the same process by which dew is formed except that the temperature of the frosted object is below freezing. Frost can be light or heavy

It is more probable, in almost every country of Europe, that there will be frost sometime in January, than that the weather will continue open throughout that whole month ;.

frost
{n} the act or power of congelation, ice
frost
{v} to cover with something like hoarfrost
frost
The formation of thin ice crystals on the ground or other surfaces Frost develops when the temperature of the exposed surface falls below 32° F and water vapor is deposited as a solid
frost
Deposition of ice at the Earth's surface because of atmospheric cooling
frost
To anger or annoy
frost
cover with frost; "ice crystals frosted the glass"
frost
The act of freezing; applied chiefly to the congelation of water; congelation of fluids
frost
A covering of ice on exposed surfaces when air temperature falls below the frost point
frost
{f} be covered with frost; give a frostlike surface to (glass, etc.); kill by frost; spread icing on a cake
frost
Fast Robotic Observatory System for Transients
frost
the formation of frost or ice on a surface
frost
United States poet famous for his lyrical poems on country life in New England (1874-1963) the formation of frost or ice on a surface ice crystals forming a white deposit (especially on objects outside) damage by frost; "The icy precipitation frosted the flowers and athey turned brown"
frost
United States poet famous for his lyrical poems on country life in New England (1874-1963)
frost
water that has condensed at a temperature below the freezing point, thus has turned to
frost
It is important for gardeners in cooler climates to be familiar with the dates of first and last frost in their area Because many plants evolved in tropical or sub-tropical climates, they are not tolerant of cold temperatures, and permanent damage is caused when the water held in plant cells freezes and expands, severing cell walls Protect against frost by using row covers, cold frames, or other devices that trap warm air around plants Remember also that cold clear nights are more dangerous than cold humid nights because water condensing from cold air can give off enough heat to moderate damage of plant tissue
frost
The covering of ice crystals that forms by direct sublimation on exposed surfaces whose temperature is below freezing
frost
Deposits of white ice crystals or frozen dew drops on objects on or near the ground Formed when the surface temperature falls below freezing (0°)
frost
The covering of ice that is formed on exposed surfaces whose temperature falls below freezing
frost
A deposit of minute ice crystals formed when water vapor condenses at a temperature below freezing
frost
on Uncirculated coins, a crystalline luster On Proof coins, the slightly grainy finish that is given to the devices
frost
condition of the weather which occurs when the air temperature is below freezing, OOC/320F Water in the atmosphere is deposited as ice crystals on the ground or exposed objects
frost
When there is frost or a frost, the temperature outside falls below freezing point and the ground becomes covered in ice crystals. There is frost on the ground and snow is forecast The wind had veered to north, bringing clear skies and a keen frost. American poet whose deceptively simple works, often set in rural New England, explore the relationships between individuals and between people and nature. His collections include A Boy's Will (1913) and In the Clearing (1962). He won a Pulitzer Prize in 1924, 1931, 1937, and 1943. to cover a cake with a mixture of powdery sugar and liquid British Equivalent: ice frost over/up to become covered in frost. Atmospheric moisture that crystallizes directly on the ground and on exposed objects. The term also refers to the occurrence of subfreezing temperatures that affect plants and crops. Frost crystals, sometimes called hoarfrost in the aggregate, form when water vapour in the atmosphere passes into the ice-crystal phase without going through the intermediate liquid phase. Frost forms under conditions that would form dew if the temperature were above freezing. In agriculture, frost refers to the freezing of the water in plant cells, which causes the cells to burst and thereby destroys the plant. Frost Robert Lee Frost Sir David Paradine Kennan George Frost
frost
{i} small ice crystals coating a cold surface; temperature at which things freeze; cool attitude, cold treatment, unfriendliness; failure (Slang)
frost
To get covered with frost
frost
Describes the formation of thin ice crystals on the ground or other surfaces Frost develops when the temperature of the earth's surface falls below 32 degrees Fahrenheit, but because frost is primarily an event that occurs as the result of radiational cooling, it frequently occurs with air temperatures in the middle 30s
frost
Water condensation occurring on surfaces below freezing Condensing water turns to ice
frost
To coat something (eg a cake) with white icing to resemble frost
frost
To roughen or sharpen, as the nail heads or calks of horseshoes, so as to fit them for frosty weather
frost
provide with a rough or speckled surface or appearance; "frost the glass"; "she frosts her hair"
frost
To injure by frost; to freeze, as plants
frost
Moisture on pavement at or below freezing (32°F / 0°C) with a pavement temperature at or below the dew point temperature This status can only be reported by SSI ESP, SP, and NTCIP sites when precipitation is not occurring
frost
Coldness or insensibility; severity or rigidity of character
frost
To cover with hoarfrost; to produce a surface resembling frost upon, as upon cake, metals, or glass
frost
ADVISORY - issued by your local NWS Forecast Office when widespread frost is expected during the growing season
frost
A cover of minute ice crystals on objects that are exposed to the air Some of these are tree branches, plant stems, leaves, wires, poles, vehicles, rooftops, or aircraft skin Frost is the same process by which dew is formed except that the temperature of the frosted object is below freezing Frost can be light or heavy
frost
decorate with frosting; "frost a cake
frost
The covering of ice, due to condensed water vapor, that is formed on exposed surfaces whose temperature falls below freezing
frost
The state or temperature of the air which occasions congelation, or the freezing of water; severe cold or freezing weather
frost
deposit of ice crystals that occurs when the air temperature is at or below the freezing point of water Also used to describe the icy deposits of water vapor that form on such surfaces as windows and windshields, which are colder than the surrounding air and which have a temperature below freezing
frost
Frozen dew; called also hoarfrost or white frost
frost
a covering of minute ice crystals on a cold surface
frost
deposition of ice on a land surface by diffusion and sublimation When thick enough to produce marked whitening of vegetation (especially grass), it is called hoar frost
frost
A covering of ice on exposed surfaces when the air temperature falls below the frost point
frost
A deposit of ice crystals onto vegetation and other surface objects by reverse sublimation when the dew-point temperature is below freezingand the actual temperature of the object falls to the dew-point dew-pointemperature
frost
The formation of thin ice crystals on the ground or other surfaces in the form of scales, needles, feathers, or fans Frost develops under conditions similar to dew, except the temperatures are colder
frost
ice crystals forming a white deposit (especially on objects outside)
frost
damage by frost; "The icy precipitation frosted the flowers and athey turned brown"
frost
decorate with frosting; "frost a cake"
frost
Ice crystal deposits formed by sublimation (conversion of water vapor directly to ice) when temperature and dew point are below freezing
frost
weather cold enough to cause freezing
sugar frosting
glossy icing for a sugar-based cake
frosting
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