What's the difference between blancmange and milk?

Blancmange


Definition:

  • (n.) A preparation for desserts, etc., made from isinglass, sea moss, cornstarch, or other gelatinous or starchy substance, with mild, usually sweetened and flavored, and shaped in a mold.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) As well as being a pallid substitute for actual creativity – a device for making grey business wonks mistake themselves for David Bowie at his experimental peak – these books are the direct suit-and-tie office-dick equivalent of those embarrassing motivational self-help tomes that prey on the insecure, promising to turn their life around before dissolving into a blancmange of "strategies" and "systems" and above all excruciating metaphors.
  • (2) "One of the problems engaging with this 'big society' idea is that it is such a blancmange.
  • (3) The flesh rolled away like blancmange, soft and gassy with putrefaction.
  • (4) With developers calling the shots, while planners egg them on, the future of the City’s silhouette looks set to be a lumpy blancmange.
  • (5) Ruby's looks less like a brain and more like a dropped blancmange.
  • (6) By the time they had raced to 4-0, there were hardly a pair of buttocks that remained in their paid-for seats, and Andy Murray rivalled any supporter in the place for eyes-out commitment as French resistance was reduced to blancmange – or very nearly a limp bagel.
  • (7) However, the man they once cruelly nicknamed Mr Flanby, after a wobbly and bland blancmange-like desert, the man the opposition accuses of political vacillation and indecision, showed he could indeed show resolve when it was called for.
  • (8) After the initial relief subsided, I began to feel progressively worse, like a blancmange sliding off a plate.
  • (9) "Miss, miss," said the boy, "they've given me blancmange, and I don't like blancmange!"
  • (10) If Hollande came across as inoffensive, indecisive and a tad wobbly, hence the Flanby nickname after a blancmange-like dessert, behind the scenes he was working to build a solid power base of popular support among socialist voters across France.
  • (11) Within this general lumpy mould – which has the look of a mauled blancmange from some angles – he has started slicing away more specific areas.
  • (12) "We were allowed only one spoonful of blancmange each because they didn't know how long it would have to last."
  • (13) If you want to drink real ale while listening to 1980s synth classics from Sparks and Blancmange, this is the place to do it.
  • (14) Photograph: Hayes Davidson “It looks like a raspberry blancmange,” says Richards.
  • (15) It was a rare attack from the blancmange-coloured shirts on a grey north London afternoon, with the piles of displaced earth and the huge steel armature of the new stadium now rising above the open corner at one end.

Milk


Definition:

  • (n.) A white fluid secreted by the mammary glands of female mammals for the nourishment of their young, consisting of minute globules of fat suspended in a solution of casein, albumin, milk sugar, and inorganic salts.
  • (n.) A kind of juice or sap, usually white in color, found in certain plants; latex. See Latex.
  • (n.) An emulsion made by bruising seeds; as, the milk of almonds, produced by pounding almonds with sugar and water.
  • (n.) The ripe, undischarged spat of an oyster.
  • (v. t.) To draw or press milk from the breasts or udder of, by the hand or mouth; to withdraw the milk of.
  • (v. t.) To draw from the breasts or udder; to extract, as milk; as, to milk wholesome milk from healthy cows.
  • (v. t.) To draw anything from, as if by milking; to compel to yield profit or advantage; to plunder.
  • (v. i.) To draw or to yield milk.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The absolute recoveries of diazepam, nordazepam and flurazepam in human milk were 84, 86 and 92% and in human plasma 97, 89 and 94%, respectively.
  • (2) Increased plasmin activity was associated with advancing stage of lactation and older cows after appropriate adjustments were made for the effects of milk yield and SCC.
  • (3) Phenotypic relationships were examined between final score and 13 type appraisal traits and first lactation milk yield from 2935 Ayrshire, 3154 Brown Swiss, 13,110 Guernsey, 50,422 Jersey, and 924 Milking Shorthorn records.
  • (4) Four patients with acute brucellosis are described, none of whom had any connexion with farming or milk industry, the source of infection being different in each case.
  • (5) Milk yield and litter weights were similar but backfat thickness (BF) was greater in 22 C sows (P less than .05) compared to 30 C sows.
  • (6) In contrast, human breast milk contained substantially increased levels of immunoreactive PTHrP.
  • (7) Abruptly changing cows from one feeding system to another did not influence milk yield, milk composition, or body weight gain.
  • (8) When labelled long-chain fatty acids or glycerol were infused into the lactating goat, there was extensive transfer of radioactivity into milk in spite of the absence of net uptake of substrate by the mammary gland.
  • (9) The presence of BLG in human milk is a common finding in both atopic and non-atopic mothers.
  • (10) The overall result of this system has been to decrease the coefficients of variation to below 5% for all the milk and serum proteins tested.
  • (11) The relative effect of the intramammary infections and of different factors related to the cow (parity, stage of lactation, milk yield) on the individual cell counts, were studied for 30 months on the 62 black-and-white Holstein cows of an experimental herd.
  • (12) Leukocytes were isolated by centrifugation from milk collected at postinjection hour 16.
  • (13) Postpartum milk samples from 61 heifers and 24 tissues from 2 reactor cattle were culture-negative for B abortus.
  • (14) The fact that proteolytic activity could be detected within 2 days at 7 degrees C is significant, since bulk cooled milk is normally held for 3 to 4 days at temperatures between 4 and 7 degrees C at farms or factories prior to processing.
  • (15) Aldi, Lidl and Morrisons are to raise the price they pay their suppliers for milk, bowing to growing pressure from dairy farmers who say the industry is in crisis.
  • (16) Increasing dietary protein percent raised milk protein percent but not protein yield or yield of other milk components, milk yield, SCM yield, or DM intake.
  • (17) It was also established that the Y. enterocolitica strains isolated from raw cow milk did not refer to the European serotypes 0:3 and 0:9 that were pathogenic for humans.
  • (18) The major lipase in human milk is dependent on bile salts for activity and probably participates in intestinal digestion of milk lipids in the newborn.
  • (19) Calves were fed milk replacer twice daily while housed indoors in wooden-slatted floor box crates (metabolism cages).
  • (20) During a single reversal trial of two 2-wk experimental periods, teats of all glands of 12 Holstein cows were subjected to a milking routine conducive to large vacuum fluctuations and flooded teat cups.

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