dulcet | (adj) เพราะ, เสนาะหู, ไพเราะเพราะพริ้ง, ชื่นใจ |
dulce | |
dulcea | |
dulcet |
dulcet |
dulcet | (adj) extremely pleasant in a gentle way |
dulcet | (adj) pleasing to the ear, Syn. sweet, mellifluous, honeyed, mellisonant |
celery | (n) widely cultivated herb with aromatic leaf stalks that are eaten raw or cooked, Syn. Apium graveolens dulce, cultivated celery |
florence fennel | (n) grown especially for its edible aromatic bulbous stem base, Syn. Foeniculum vulgare dulce, Foeniculum dulce |
manila tamarind | (n) common thorny tropical American tree having terminal racemes of yellow flowers followed by sickle-shaped or circinate edible pods and yielding good timber and a yellow dye and mucilaginous gum, Syn. camachile, huamachil, Pithecellobium dulce, wild tamarind |
Addulce | v. t. [ Like F. adoucir; fr. L. ad. + dulcis sweet. ] To sweeten; to soothe. [ Obs. ] Bacon. [ 1913 Webster ] |
Dulce | v. t. To make sweet; to soothe. [ Obs. ] [ 1913 Webster ] |
Dulceness | n. Sweetness. [ Obs. ] Bacon. [ 1913 Webster ] |
Dulcet | a. [ OF. doucet, dim. of dous sweet, F. doux, L. dulcis; akin to Gr. &unr_; . Cf. Doucet. ] She tempers dulcet creams. Milton. [ 1913 Webster ] Their dainty lays and dulcet melody. Spenser. [ 1913 Webster ] |
wohlklingend | dulcet [Add to Longdo] |