|
| cake [ kayk ] |
noun (plural cakes) |
|
| Definition: |
| |
1. baked sweet flour-based food: a baked sweet food usually made from flour, fat, sugar, eggs, and other ingredients
|
2. shaped portion of ground or chopped food: an individual portion of ground or chopped food, shaped into a flat round piece and cooked, often by frying or broiling
 potato cakes
|
3. block of something: a solid block of something, e.g. soap, ice, or chocolate
|
4. thick layer: a thick layer of something that has collected over a period of time
|
5. something divided up: something that is to be shared or divided up, e.g. an amount of money
 Everyone wants a slice of the cake.
|
verb (past and past participle caked, present participle cak·ing, 3rd person present singular cakes) |
|
| Definition: |
| |
1. transitive and intransitive verb form crust on something: to form, or cover something with, a thick layer of a substance such as dirt, grease, or grime
 My boots were caked with mud after I walked through the field.
|
2. intransitive verb form into cake: to form into a solid mass
|
noun (plural cakes) |
|
| Definition: |
| |
taboo term: a highly offensive term for a woman's genitals
(
taboo
)
|
| [12th century. < Old Norse kaka "flat round loaf"] |
|
 cak·ey adjective |
|
|
have your cake and eat it (too) to try to enjoy the advantages of two things, each of which tends to make the other impossible
|
take the cake
1. to be even worse than all the other bad or annoying things that went before
2. to be outstandingly good or successful
|