toast

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In the final scene, drunken wedding guests are toasting the health of the bridal couple when the police make their blustering, inarticulate entrance.

Innovative practices of re-composition were central to a number of black electronic musics, including dub, toasting, scratching, rap, hip hop and their derivatives.

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The health of the poet or composer is then toasted and then the beauty of the song will be discussed.

Cooking a proper meal for one is time-consuming and meals may become limited to tea, toast and biscuits.

It consisted of a piece of toast and a nice reed-bird.

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In an age increasingly preoccupied by speech, even a toast could carry far-reaching consequences.

This usually includes toast and egg with coffee or milk, and perhaps a small salad.

The sandwich became emblematic of a technological artifact, especially if constructed on white toast.

I lived on toast and soup and things like that.

Note that, in our study, accuracy on word-final /s/+stop clusters, as in toast /toost/, was relatively poor.

Good health is such an integral part of human well-being that, in many languages, everyday greetings and mealtime toasts are synonymous with best wishes for it.

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So limited are the staples materials and real estate of an atoll-dweller that less toast and tea, beans, bread and chips which are the staples of poor people's diets.

Not all the toasts were so political.

Up at 6.15, made first mate tea and toast then clear supper things away and get ready for two breakfast at 7.45am, then 10 at 8 o'clock.

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I am afraid the exuberant gentleman at the dinner who proposed the toast did not sufficiently think where the analogy might lead him.

These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. [external_footer]

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