decant
decant 英 [dɪˈkænt] 美 [dɪ'kænt]
vt. 移入其他容器;轻轻倒出
进行时:decanting 过去式:decanted 过去分词:decanted 第三人称单数:decants 名词复数:decants
- The verb decant means "to pour." Kids moving water back and forth between two cups, your dad pouring a bucket of soapy water in the sink, or a wine expert emptying a bottle of wine into a fancy glass container — all of them are decanting liquids.
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- vt. 移入其他容器;轻轻倒出
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1. Should I decant? Generally, no - at least, not at first.
一般来说不需要,至少一开始不必换瓶。
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2. Traveling tappers climb coconut trees, tap the fruit’s blossom and decant the sap into a bottle.
流动采集工人爬上椰子树,轻轻地敲开椰壳,将椰子汁倒入一个瓶子里。
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3. If we taste a wine and it's so tight that it needs decanting, we can decant; if we decant first and then find that the wine lost some fruit to the air, there's no going back.
如果尝一口后觉得酒味过于涩,需要“呼吸”一下,那么就可以换瓶。 假如一开始就去醒酒,结果发现葡萄酒的一些果味流失在空气之中,那就没有后悔药可吃了。
- decant (v.) 1630s, "pour off the clear liquid from a solution by gently tipping the vessel," originally an alchemical term, from French décanter, perhaps from Medieval Latin decanthare "to pour from the edge of a vessel," from de- + Medieval Latin canthus "corner, lip of a jug," from Latin cantus, canthus "iron rim around a carriage wheel" (see cant (n.2)). Related: Decanted; decanting.
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