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Cream   /krim/   Listen
noun
Cream  n.  
1.
The rich, oily, and yellowish part of milk, which, when the milk stands unagitated, rises, and collects on the surface. It is the part of milk from which butter is obtained.
2.
The part of any liquor that rises, and collects on the surface. (R.)
3.
A delicacy of several kinds prepared for the table from cream, etc., or so as to resemble cream.
4.
A cosmetic; a creamlike medicinal preparation. "In vain she tries her paste and creams, To smooth her skin or hide its seams."
5.
The best or choicest part of a thing; the quintessence; as, the cream of a jest or story; the cream of a collection of books or pictures. "Welcome, O flower and cream of knights errant."
Bavarian cream, a preparation of gelatin, cream, sugar, and eggs, whipped; to be eaten cold.
Cold cream, an ointment made of white wax, almond oil, rose water, and borax, and used as a salve for the hands and lips.
Cream cheese, a kind of cheese made from curd from which the cream has not been taken off, or to which cream has been added.
Cream gauge, an instrument to test milk, being usually a graduated glass tube in which the milk is placed for the cream to rise.
Cream nut, the Brazil nut.
Cream of lime.
(a)
A scum of calcium carbonate which forms on a solution of milk of lime from the carbon dioxide of the air.
(b)
A thick creamy emulsion of lime in water.
Cream of tartar (Chem.), purified tartar or argol; so called because of the crust of crystals which forms on the surface of the liquor in the process of purification by recrystallization. It is a white crystalline substance, with a gritty acid taste, and is used very largely as an ingredient of baking powders; called also potassium bitartrate, acid potassium tartrate, etc.



verb
Cream  v. t.  (past & past part. creamed; pres. part. creaming)  
1.
To skim, or take off by skimming, as cream.
2.
To take off the best or choicest part of.
3.
To furnish with, or as with, cream. "Creaming the fragrant cups."
To cream butter (Cooking), to rub, stir, or beat, butter till it is of a light creamy consistency.



Cream  v. i.  To form or become covered with cream; to become thick like cream; to assume the appearance of cream; hence, to grow stiff or formal; to mantle. "There are a sort of men whose visages Do cream and mantle like a standing pool."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Cream" Quotes from Famous Books



... introduction to his friend at Horncastle, and also his bill, which I found anything but extravagant. After we had each respectively drank the contents of two cups—and it may not be amiss here to inform the reader that though I took cream with my tea, as I always do when I can procure that addition, the old man, like most people bred up in the country, drank his without it—he thus addressed me:—"I am, as I told you on the night of your accident, the son of a breeder of horses, ...
— The Romany Rye - A Sequel to 'Lavengro' • George Borrow

... week the travellers were kept wind-bound off the Devon coast, now at anchor, now making vain efforts to proceed. We hear of the 'fine clouted cream,' and the delicious cyder of the county (two hogsheads of which latter Fielding purchased as presents for his friends); of the excellence of the local fish named 'john doree,' of the scandalous need of legislation for ...
— Henry Fielding: A Memoir • G. M. Godden

... Mr. Levison in no very amiable mood; but just as he was leaving the house, a cabriolet, beautifully painted, of a brilliant green colour picked out with a somewhat cream-coloured white, and drawn by a showy Holstein horse of tawny tint, with a flowing and milk-white tail and mane, and caparisoned in harness almost as precious as Mr. Levison's sideboard, dashed up ...
— Henrietta Temple - A Love Story • Benjamin Disraeli

... plenty to-night, Missies," she said ingratiatingly. "Cheesecakes and vanilla sandwiches and coco-nut drops and cream wafers. What'll you ...
— For the Sake of the School • Angela Brazil

... to the waist, so as to appear like three over skirts, open in front. The body is trimmed with a double berthe of Vandyked lace, which is also carried round the sleeves. The gloves are rather long, and of a delicate cream-color. The hair is dressed somewhat in the Grecian style so as to form a rouleau round the face—the front hair being combed back over a narrow roll of brown silk stuffed with wool, which is fastened round the head like a wreath. A golden bandeau ...
— Godey's Lady's Book, Vol. 42, January, 1851 • Various


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