What's the difference between dough and moulder?

Dough


Definition:

  • (n.) Paste of bread; a soft mass of moistened flour or meal, kneaded or unkneaded, but not yet baked; as, to knead dough.
  • (n.) Anything of the consistency of such paste.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) 3 Tip the dough on to a clean work surface and knead well.
  • (2) 3 For the dough: melt the lard with 100ml water in a small pan and leave to cool slightly.
  • (3) "), and the Scousers ("Dey do dough, don't dey dough?").
  • (4) Transfer the dough to a clean work surface, punch out some of the air, then roll into a 30cm-long sausage.
  • (5) Tip out the risen dough onto a lightly floured worktop and punch down (knock back) to deflate.
  • (6) Keep kneading until the dough no longer sticks to the board.
  • (7) For these palmiers, however, – full of chocolate and honey – I've found the rolling method is best for keeping the filling contained in the swirls of dough and stopping it from seeping across the baking tray.
  • (8) The key difference is in the role of the tourier who rolls the dough out on their chilled marble slabs or tours .
  • (9) 4 Spread the filling over the dough in a thin layer then roll the dough into a cylinder from the longest side.
  • (10) When dividing the dough into pieces, you can weigh them to be sure they are all about the same.
  • (11) Increase the speed to medium-high and work the dough for 10 minutes more, until smooth and elastic.
  • (12) They don't even get to go home for a sleep because dough requires contant prodding, waiting, more prodding and worrying.
  • (13) Pull the dough around the filling and pinch it together at the top, then work around the edges.
  • (14) Singles Day in China was invented by students in the 1990s as Bachelors’ Day – a day to meet prospective partners and hang out with single friends eating deep-fried dough sticks representing the four ones in 11.11 or steamed buns which represent the dot.
  • (15) Add to the dough and gently incorporate by hand, mixing the cheese and jelly evenly into the dough.
  • (16) Roll out the dough into a rectangle, says the recipe.
  • (17) The sedimentation and consistency of the mixtures differed from those of the white corn flour, but without altering the capacity of dough formation to prepare arepas.
  • (18) The predominance of S. exiguus, its vigor in the particular acidic environment of the sour dough, and the correlation of its numbers with the leavening function constitute strong evidence on the role of this organism in the sour dough system.
  • (19) The antimicrobial effects of the different processes involved in the preparation of fermented maize dough porridge were assessed.
  • (20) Traditional fermented foods from most countries of the world may be classified into the following categories: fungal fermentation followed by brining, SSF principally using bacteria, lactic acid fermentation followed by fungal fermentation, production of fermented doughs, alcoholic fermentation, and fermented food ingredients.

Moulder


Definition:

  • (n.) One who, or that which, molds or forms into shape; specifically (Founding), one skilled in the art of making molds for castings.
  • (v. i.) To crumble into small particles; to turn to dust by natural decay; to lose form, or waste away, by a gradual separation of the component particles, without the presence of water; to crumble away.
  • (v. t.) To turn to dust; to cause to crumble; to cause to waste away.
  • () Alt. of Mouldy

Example Sentences:

  • (1) "I did a job search online yesterday for injection moulders, which is what I specialise in.
  • (2) Risk of lung cancer was increased significantly for electricians; sheetmetal workers and tinsmiths; bookbinders and related printing trade workers; cranemen, derrickmen, and hoistmen; moulders, heat treaters, annealers and other heated metal workers; and construction labourers.
  • (3) Tribby, Ilse I. E. (University of Chicago, Chicago, Ill.), and James W. Moulder.
  • (4) The most apparent neuro-muscular changes were found in the professional groups of moulders and mould-cutters, which could be related to the greatest dosages of vibration and intensive physical overload.
  • (5) But there has to be one, because although most squatters just need somewhere to live and often maintain mouldering, neglected buildings and save them from terminal collapse and vandalism, what about the few really naughty squatters, who make a mess and noise, pretend to be artists and pinch your home while you're on hols or in hospital?
  • (6) Six months on from the election that swept the Nobel prize-winning campaigner Aung San Suu Kyi’s party to power , the skyline of Yangon is bristling with cranes and concrete frames as a clutch of new towers rises above the mouldering rooftops of the old colonial centre.
  • (7) Not only are there temples, teashops and mouldering colonial-era mansions to explore but, increasingly, tourists can rub shoulders with both investors and cheroot-smokers at art galleries and chic bars, and experience a vibrant youth culture.
  • (8) The music was recorded with the help of regular Nine Inch Nails bedfellows Alan Moulder, Atticus Ross and Alessandro Cortini, as well as King Crimson's Adrian Belew and the Dresden Dolls' Brian Viglione.
  • (9) Rats given 10% or more of the mouldered material in the diet developed thrombocytopenia after 14 days which was followed by haematuria, epistaxis, melaena, and death.
  • (10) And from what I see of the London office, where a desktop PC lies mouldering in the corner like a relic from another era, they're generally hip, young Mac slingers who hold their office meetings on Skype and are as likely to be collaborating on a Google document with a colleague in Brazil for a campaign in Portugal as they are to be working on a UK issue with the person sitting next to them.
  • (11) To assess the influence of foundry exposure on malignant and non-malignant respiratory disease, the proportional mortality ratio (PMR) was used to compare the cause of death distributions of the 578 dead members of the Iron Moulders Society of South Africa, recipients of the union's death benefit fund between 1961 and 1983.
  • (12) 300 workers of metalurgical plant exposed to vibrations were divided according to the chief work tool into the three groups: 1) moulder, 2) mould cleaner and 3) ironworker--grinder.
  • (13) A total of 39 moulders and coremakers exposed to furan resin sand and 27 unexposed local controls were examined by lung-function tests before and after a work shift.
  • (14) Limited job opportunities may discourage moulders with respiratory disease from leaving the foundry.
  • (15) He will have his "village", although it will be no Little-Mouldering-on-the-Marsh, and it is hard to see how the social mixing that is presumably part of the attraction of the village idea will take place.
  • (16) Maurice, meanwhile, is terrified of mouldering in respectable suburbia, dragging some poor virgin into the sepulchre with him.
  • (17) The highest mutagenic activity was found at the following work-posts: caster, moulder, steerer of an induction furnace, and smelter and in the office rooms and in the flat occupied by heavy smokers.
  • (18) The osteoarthretic form of vibration disease was significantly more frequent when the multiplicity of surpassing the velocity of vibration occurred with low frequencies (moulders), and angioneurotic form was more frequent at high and very high frequencies.
  • (19) It stank of sweat and the mouldering shirts, which they wore "till they fell apart, mate".)
  • (20) The result in Meerut is very large numbers of young men, on the streets, in the bus station, around the university, outside the Hair Fixing Centre and the IDEA High Speed Internet Store, outside the shabby cinema where posters advertising the latest Bollywood blockbusters peel from mouldering walls.

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