Online Google Dictionary

bisque 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Adjective
/bisk/,
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bisques, plural;
  1. Light brown in color

Noun
  1. Fired unglazed pottery
    • - using bisque for doll heads
    • - bisque figurines
  2. A light brown color
    • - shades of bisque, taupe, and chocolate brown

  1. a thick cream soup made from shellfish
  2. Bisque is a smooth, creamy, highly-seasoned soup of French origin, classically based on a strained broth (coulis) of crustaceans. It can be made from lobster, crab, shrimp or crayfish. Also, creamy soups made from roasted and puréed vegetables are sometimes called bisques.
  3. Bisque porcelain is unglazed, white ceramic ware . Examples include bisque dolls .
  4. A thick creamy soup made from fish, shellfish, meat or vegetables; An extra turn, free point or some other advantage allowed; A pale pinkish brown colour; of a pale pinkish brown colour
  5. A soup based on purees of vegetables and/or crustaceans. It is classically thickened with rice and usually finished with cream.
  6. An informal handicapping system in which one player allows another to take a "free" stroke, called a "bisque," at whichever hole he or she chooses. Such a stroke taken without explicit permission from another player is a "tisquetisque."
  7. When you look at a glazed tile from the side you can see 2 layers. The body of the tile, or largest layer, is called the bisque. The top layer is called the glaze.
  8. Clay that has been fired once and is unglazed.
  9. Unglazed areas of vitreous china fixtures, such as inside the tank or on the bottom of the bowl foot, have a bisque finish.
  10. A thick creamy spicy soup served with crawfish, oysters, or shrimp (fantastic with mud bugs!)
  11. Unglazed porcelain or pottery commonly used for Neo-Classical sculptures and decorative items since the middle of the 18th century.
  12. A handicap stroke that can be taken on any hole, provided the player announces his intention before teeing off on that hole.
  13. Pots that have been given a preliminary firing to render them hard enough for further work such as decoration and glazing. The higher the temperature of the bisque firing, the harder will be pot, resulting in reduced reaction between glaze and body in the final firing.
  14. A ceramic material that has a matte or unglazed surface. In finer antique dolls, it appears almost translucent. It is used for antique doll heads or for all-bisque dolls and is often flesh colored. Earlier antique dolls tend to have paler bisque but there are exceptions. ...
  15. a shellfish soup with cream
  16. A thick soup usually made from shellfish or game; also, an ice cream to which finely chopped macaroons have been added.
  17. Unglazed porcelain, after first firing and before china painting and second firing.
  18. Bisqueware is unglazed, air-dried (aka bone dry) greenware that has been bisque fired, or fired once, to a temperature preceding vitrification. Bisque is usually pink or flesh-tinted, and was historically used to make dolls and doll heads. Bisque can also be glazed and then fired again.
  19. A popular Cajun  soup made with crawfish, in which the crawfish heads are stuffed with meat of the tails and placed in the soup bowl.
  20. Bisque is very much like ceramic, One can be told from the other by looking inside the doll (the head is usually hollow). Bisque is white with a painted exterior; ceramic is a solid color throughout.
  21. A handicap stroke given to an opponents who may nominate what hole to take it on. The hole must be determined prior to the match.
  22. (ceramics) Refering to unglazed but fired ware.
  23. fired pottery that is unglazed. This term deals mostly with industrial methods of high temperature firing of the unglazed ware followed by lower temperatures for glazing. ...
  24. a rich spicy soup containing lobster, shrimp or other seafood.
  25. When clay has its first firing in a kiln, it is called bisque ware. At this point, the clay has changed composition and can no longer have water added to it and turned back into a useable material.