What's the difference between caraway and carraway?

Caraway


Definition:

  • (n.) A biennial plant of the Parsley family (Carum Carui). The seeds have an aromatic smell, and a warm, pungent taste. They are used in cookery and confectionery, and also in medicine as a carminative.
  • (n.) A cake or sweetmeat containing caraway seeds.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) • Petra's spinster landladies added caraway seeds to their mix.
  • (2) The enantiomers R-(-)- and S-(+)-carvone are the organoleptic constituents in oil of spearmint and caraway, respectively.
  • (3) Caraway carrot cake with poppy seeds Photograph: Yuki Sugiura for the Guardian They're not much to look at – tiny, banana-shaped brown things – but caraway seeds have a unique flavour.
  • (4) salt, pepper, paprika, caraway-seed) had very high concentrations of all three minerals and poppy-seeds that of Ca and Mg.
  • (5) When patients' values for eight common clinical-chemical tests and five therapeutic drugs were compared with values from specimens concomitantly collected in plain Caraway tubes, only chloride and total CO2 were significantly different.
  • (6) Caraway knows intimately the outcome of what he describes as this “perfect brew” of official encouragement and Big Pharma marketing.
  • (7) The inhibitory compounds are: aromatic isothiocyanates found in cruciferous vegetables, monoterpenes present in citrus fruits and caraway-seed oil, and organosulphur compounds occurring in Allium species.
  • (8) But 10 years down the line we have come to understand the consequences.” Caraway points out that in the late 90s the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organisations, a private body that provides guidelines for hospitals, launched an initiative that encouraged doctors to wage war on pain wherever they found it.
  • (9) Cross-reactivity amongst the Apiaceae is the cause of the many positive results obtained with carrot, parsely, anise, fennel and caraway, the carrot allergy being of clinical importance in 50% of cases, including one with a history of anaphylactic shock after ingestion of raw carrots.
  • (10) The three are: aromatic isothiocyanates found in cruciferous vegetables, monoterpenes from citrus fruits and caraway seed oils, and organosulfur compounds occurring in Allium species.
  • (11) A new method has been developed for the extraction of light filth from ground mace and ground caraway seed.
  • (12) The radioactive iron-magnesium carbonate method, compared with the methods of Caraway (1963), Herbert, Gottlieb, Lau, Fisher, Grevirtz, and Wasserman (1966), and Bothwell, Jacobs, and Kamener (1959), was shorter and simpler and equally reproducible.
  • (13) The most horrifying thing I’ve seen is that this is causing hopelessness leading to suicide and murder,” Caraway says.
  • (14) Seven different spices (thyme, cinnamon, coriander, caraway, pimento, paprika, black pepper) were treated by gamma radiation at an absorbed dose of 10 kGy, and the effect on chemical quality was determined.
  • (15) Brussels sprouts with burnt butter, black garlic and caraway Serve these straight out of the hot pan, otherwise the sprouts will lose that vibrant colour.
  • (16) Leaves of caraway and fennel in addition contain isorhammetin glycosides in low concentration.
  • (17) Aqueous extracts of different spices (chilli pepper, paprika, caraway, coriander leaves, coriander seeds, cinnamon, ginger, onion, curry, and parsley) caused a dose-related contractile response of isolated guinea pig tracheal smooth muscle.
  • (18) Add the garlic, caraway, allspice and peppercorns, and sauté for five more minutes, until everything is nice and soft.
  • (19) Both recoverable serum and the incidence of hemolysis were lower in Samplette specimens than in Caraway specimens.
  • (20) After adjustment for an empirical living conditions score, the following food items were found to be associated with an increased risk for NPC: preserved spiced meat (quaddid), basic stewing preparation (mixture of red and black pepper, garlic, oil, caraway and coriander), and harissa (red pepper, olive oil, garlic, caraway, salt) taken with bread as a snack during childhood and youth.

Carraway


Definition:

  • (n.) See Caraway.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Immunohistochemical experiments (Reiner and Carraway; Brain Res.
  • (2) Me2+ interactions with the cytoplasmic kinase domain apparently result in conformational changes which regulate the levels of tyrosine kinase activity, influence the degree to which this activity is responsive to EGF, and probably account for the effects of Me2+ on the aggregation state of the receptor (Carraway, K.L., III, Koland, J.G.
  • (3) This three-component complex contains, in addition to 58 K, actin associated directly and stably with a cell surface glycoprotein (Carraway, CAC, Jung, G & Carraway, K L, Proc.
  • (4) Sequential subcellular fractionation of thyroid homogenates yielded preparations of progressively greater specific binding activity, highest activity being found in fractions previously shown to contain predominately plasma membranes (Amir, S. M., Carraway, T.F., Kohn, L.D., and Winand, R.J. (1973) J. Biol.
  • (5) Limited proteolysis of the microvilli releases large, highly glycosylated fragments of ASGP-1 from the microvilli and increases the association of ASGP-2 with the Triton-insoluble microvillar microfilament core (Vanderpuye OA, Carraway CAC, Carraway, KL: Exp Cell Res 178:211, 1988).
  • (6) Analysis of large (greater than 10(6) kDa) transmembrane complexes from microvillar membranes made under microfilament-depolymerizing conditions (Carraway, C. A. C., Jung, G., and Carraway, K. L. (1983) Proc.
  • (7) The great themes of Gatsby are so quintessentially American that they recur endlessly throughout the nation's art anyway: Don Draper, with his occluded origins, unconquerable solitude and loveless prosperity, is Gatsby 1968; Sunset Boulevard grants Norma Desmond and Joe Gillis precisely the same delusions about recovering the past as are shared by Gatsby and Carraway; and the criminal origin of respectable fortunes is a time-worn narrative trope (The Godfather again).
  • (8) These studies indicate that the Ca2+-induced membrane proteolysis and aggregation effects are not due simply to its presence at the time of hemolysis as previously suggested (Carraway, K.L., Triplett, R.B.
  • (9) In all of these characteristics, 125I-thyrotropin at 1.5 x 10(-5) M concentrations has the same properties of binding to bovine plasma membranes as do [3H]thyrotropin preparations which have been previously characterized (Amir, S.M., Carraway, T.F., Jr., Kohn, L.D., and Winand, R.V.
  • (10) The sialic acid content of MAT-C1 ASGP-1 is 2-3-fold greater than MAT-B1 ASGP-1 (Sherblom, A. P., Buck, R. L., and Carraway, K. L. (1980) J. Biol.
  • (11) It may try to plug the gap by increasing the price of tickets or of slices of poppy and carraway seed cake made to a recipe from the poet's sister Dorothy, available in the museum tearoom.
  • (12) The level of 3H acetylation of each of the 7 lysines was determined and corrected for differences arising from reaction conditions using the labeling of the internal standard, following procedures that are closely similar to those used in a previous study of the interaction of calmodulin with myosin light chain kinase (Jackson, A. E., Carraway, K. L., III, Puett, D., and Brew, K. (1986) J. Biol.
  • (13) All temporal-artery biopsies done at Carraway Methodist Medical Center between January 1980 and January 1985 were reviewed.
  • (14) The O-linked oligosaccharides from both MAT-B1 and MAT-C1 ASGP-1 have been shown to contain a core tetrasaccharide Gal(beta 1-4)GlcNAc(beta 1-6)(Gal(beta 1-3]GalNAc in which both galactose residues may be linked to additional sugars (Hull, S. R., Laine, R. A., Kaizu, T., Rodriquez, I., and Carraway, K. L. (1984) J. Biol.
  • (15) Chem., 255: 783-790, 1980; Sherblom and Carraway, J. Biol.
  • (16) Comparison with results obtained from myosin light chain kinase using a similar technique (Jackson, A. E., Carraway, K. L., III, Puett, D., and Brew, K. (1986) J. Biol.
  • (17) With certain exceptions, these results support and extend the original findings of Singer and Carraway concerning the ability of pepsin to generate extremely high concentrations of EIPs from plasma protein(s).

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