mushrooms

listen to the pronunciation of mushrooms
İngilizce - İngilizce
(Chinese) Dried and black-must be soaked in boiling water before using
Plural of mushroom
DRIED BLACK: Richly-flavored, aromatic mushroom that combines well with most ingredients Soak in enough warm water to cover for 30 minutes before using SNOW: Also known as grass mushrooms Suble flavor with a crunchy texture Available in cans TREE MUSHROOMS (EARS): Also known as cloud ears or wood ears
Many varieties beside the common white button mushroom are in supermarkets now Shitake and portabella mushrooms have received the most attention You can experiment in your cooking by substituting one type of mushroom for another and savor the flavor change
Edible fungi used for flavouring soups and some meat dishes In Northern India, fresh, dried, or canned mushrooms are used for pulaos and some gravies N
darning mushrooms
plural form of darning mushroom
king oyster mushrooms
plural form of king oyster mushroom
magic mushrooms
plural form of magic mushroom
mushroom
Any of the fleshy fruiting bodies of fungi typically produced above ground on soil or on their food sources (such as decaying wood)

Some mushrooms are edible and taste good, while others are poisonous and taste foul.

mushroom
To gather mushrooms
oyster mushrooms
plural form of oyster mushroom
straw mushrooms
plural form of straw mushroom
mushroom
{n} a spungy plant, an upstart
psilocybin mushrooms
Psilocybin mushrooms (also called psilocybian mushrooms) are fungi that contain the psychedelic substances psilocybin and psilocin, and occasionally other psychoactive tryptamines. There are multiple colloquial terms for psilocybin mushrooms, the most common being magic mushrooms or 'shrooms. See List of Psilocybin mushrooms for a list of species containing psilocybin
mushroom
pick or gather mushrooms; "We went mushrooming in the Fall"
mushroom
A fungus producing such fruiting bodies
mushroom
An edible fungus (Agaricus campestris), having a white stalk which bears a convex or oven flattish expanded portion called the pileus
mushroom
a type of fungus
mushroom
To grow quickly to a large size
mushroom
{i} any of numerous types of fungi that have short thick stems and cap-like tops (of which some are highly poisonous and some are edible)
mushroom
Any large fungus, especially one of the genus Agaricus; a toadstool
mushroom
an upright tuft of close millefiori or close concentric millefiori canes, tapering at the base and flaring at the top
mushroom
It has a pleasant smell, and is largely used as food
mushroom
Several species are edible; but many are very poisonous
mushroom
One who rises suddenly from a low condition in life; an upstart
mushroom
Resembling mushrooms in rapidity of growth and shortness of duration; short-lived; ephemerial; as, mushroom cities
mushroom
It is also cultivated from spawn
mushroom
any of various fleshy fungi of the subdivision Basidiomycota consisting of a cap at the end of a stem arising from an underground mycelium
mushroom
fleshy body of any of numerous edible fungi a large cloud of rubble and dust shaped like a mushroom and rising into the sky after an explosion (especially of a nuclear bomb) any of various fleshy fungi of the subdivision Basidiomycota consisting of a cap at the end of a stem arising from an underground mycelium common name for an edible agaric (contrasting with the inedible toadstool) grow and spread fast; "The problem mushroomed"
mushroom
The plant grows in rich pastures and is (Atasözü)ial for rapidity of growth and shortness of duration
mushroom
Resembling a mushroom by shape or appearance
mushroom
A thunderstorm with a well-defined anvil rollover, and thus having a visual appearance resembling a mushroom
mushroom
An effect caused to the striking surface of the die where the jammer strickes the die Mushrooming can also cause the die to crack
mushroom
Of or pertaining to mushrooms; as, mushroom catchup
mushroom
pick or gather mushrooms; "We went mushrooming in the Fall
mushroom
grow and spread fast; "The problem mushroomed"
mushroom
common name for an edible agaric (contrasting with the inedible toadstool)
mushroom
Containing or being made of mushrooms
mushroom
(an archaic form is mushrump) (French, mousseron, a white mushroom; Latin, muscus, moss ) “Vocatur fungus muscarum, eo quod in lacte pulverizatus interficit muscas ”- Albertus Magnus, vii 345 Music Father of music Giovanni Battista Pietro Aloisio da Palestrina Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina was “the prince of musicians ” (1529-1594 ) Father of Greek music Terpander (Flourished B C 676 ) The prince of music G Pietro A da Palestrina (1529-1594) Music hath charms, etc ; from Congreve's Mourning Bride, i l
mushroom
Large, sometimes edible, fruiting body produced by some fungi
mushroom
[Slang], a thunderstorm with a well-defined anvil rollover, and thus having a visual appearance resembling a mushroom
mushroom
A structure bearing the reproductive organs of the plant that produce spores
mushroom
The unacceptable occurrence when the top of a caisson concrete pier spreads out and hardens to become wider than the foundation wall thickness
mushroom
{s} mushroom-like, resembling a mushroom; of mushrooms
mushroom
Mushrooms are fungi that you can eat. There are many types of wild mushrooms. mushroom omelette. see also button mushroom
mushroom
This is whitish and silky or somewhat scaly above, and bears on the under side radiating gills which are at first flesh-colored, but gradually become brown
mushroom
There are thousands of varieties of this fleshy fungus The cultivated mushroom is commonly available, but other wild varieties include cepe, chanterelle, enokitake, morel, puffball, and shiitake Many wild mushrooms are poisonous
mushroom
If something such as an industry or a place mushrooms, it grows or comes into existence very quickly. The media training industry has mushroomed over the past decade A sleepy capital of a few hundred thousand people has mushroomed to a crowded city of 2 million. to grow and develop very quickly. Fleshy spore-bearing structure of certain fungi (see fungus), typically of the class Basidiomycetes. It arises from the mycelium, which may live hundreds of years or a few months, depending on its food supply. Some species grow cellular strands (hyphae) in all directions, forming a circular mat with a "fairy ring" of fruiting bodies around the outside. Popularly, "mushroom" refers to the edible sporophores, while "toadstool" refers to inedible or poisonous sporophores, but there is no scientific distinction between the two names. Mushrooms are classified by cap shape. Umbrella-shaped sporophores with spore-shedding gills on the undersurface are found chiefly in the agaric family (Agaricaceae). Mushrooms that bear spores in an easily detachable layer on the underside of the cap belong to the family Boletaceae. Together the agarics and boletes include most of the forms known as mushrooms. The highly prized edible chanterelle is a bolete. The morels (class Ascomycetes) are popularly included with the true mushrooms because of their shape and fleshy structure. Since some poisonous mushrooms closely resemble edible ones, mushrooms intended for eating must be accurately identified. Mushroom poisoning can cause nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, cramps, hallucinations, coma, and sometimes death
mushroom
a large cloud of rubble and dust shaped like a mushroom and rising into the sky after an explosion (especially of a nuclear bomb)
mushroom
{f} gather mushrooms; sprout up rapidly like mushrooms, develop at a great pace
mushroom
fleshy body of any of numerous edible fungi
mushroom
shroom
mushrooms

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    mʌşrumz

    Telaffuz

    /ˈməsʜro͞omz/ /ˈmʌʃruːmz/

    Etimoloji

    [ 'm&sh-"rüm, -"rum; ] (noun.) 1533. alteration of Middle English musseroun, from Middle French mousseron, from Late Latin mussirion-, mussirio.