kosher
kosher 英 [ˈkəʊʃə(r)] 美 [ˈkoʊʃə(r)]
adj. 合适的;符合犹太教教规的,干净的
名词复数:koshers
- In Jewish law, food must be ritually cleaned and prepared in order to be kosher, or fit to eat. Today, it can also mean anything that is proper or legitimate. Is it kosher to date your best friend's ex? Depends on who you ask.
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- adj. 合适的;符合犹太教教规的,干净的
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1. “If I could get kosher for Passover flour, I would use it,” he said.
他说:“如果我能获得合适的逾越节面粉,我会使用的。
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2. He takes this saying of Jesus and he says, Jesus was declaring all foods clean so we don't have to keep kosher.
他拿出耶稣说的这句话,并评论道,耶稣说各样食物都是洁净的,所以我们无需按犹太教规准备食物。
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3. At the kosher dinner table in her home near Cleveland, she said she would start arguments with her parents so she could stomp off and avoid eating.
她家位于克利夫兰,她说在犹太式的晚餐桌上,她会和她爸妈吵起来,这样她就可以跺脚离开,避免吃饭了。
- kosher (adj.) "ritually fit or pure, clean, lawful, conforming to the requirements of the Talmud" (especially of food), 1850, in early use also kasher, coshar, from Yiddish kosher, from Hebrew kasher "fit, proper, lawful," from base of kasher "was suitable, proper." Generalized sense of "correct, legitimate" is from 1896.
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