toffee
IPA: tˈɑfi
noun
- (uncountable) A type of confectionery made by boiling sugar (or treacle, etc) with butter or milk, then cooling the mixture so that it becomes hard.
- (countable) A small, individual piece of toffee.
- (Northern England) Any kind of sweets; candy.
- (informal, UK, soccer) A fan or member of Everton F.C..
verb
- (transitive) To coat in toffee.
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Examples of "toffee" in Sentences
- I obviously can't read for toffee.
- Toffee is a desperate image stylist.
- It's revealed that the voice was Toffee.
- Lecturers can't teach this subject for toffee.
- Those apples covered with a coating of toffee.
- Also, more information on the toffee would be great.
- Please reconsider the deletion of the dog toffee page.
- Toffee is the Hollywood trendsetter of the Tini Puppinis.
- The popcorn is coated with toffee and rolled in crushed peanuts.
- Taffy is not as sticky as soft toffee, but much softer than hard toffee.
- In Britain the word toffee now appears to be used to describe both forms.
- Scatter strips of crystallized ginger and cumin toffee cashews over the plate.
- There's sugar in toffee and in jam, and they're hot, leastways they're hot to be made.
- As an aside, the word toffee is comparatively new (19th century), and in Wales the sweet would have been known as cyflaith, ffanni, and most commonly taffi (taffy).
- The toffee is a bit of an accquired taste - some kids come back for more, some chuck it away and we find it days later gently deliquescing and looking remarkable like a dying slug.
- I wonder if using a tart type of apple and adding in toffee chips would be as amazing as my brain thinks it would be. jenn Oct 2 oh, i so know what i’m making tomorrow! thank you so much!!!!
- Just as frogs use glucose, Arctic brine shrimp and many cold-tolerant insects use a sugar called trehalose, which forms a syrup as thick as stretchy toffee, is even better at lowering freezing points and stopping dehydration than glycerol or glucose.
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