What's the difference between jumbled and macaronic?

Jumbled


Definition:

  • (imp. & p. p.) of Jumble

Example Sentences:

  • (1) British students now occupy fourth place in the ethnic jumble in Maastricht and their numbers are rising relatively fast.
  • (2) The surprise move came after Tuesday's much-noticed stumble, when the US supreme court chief justice, John Roberts, jumbled the words, prompting Obama to follow suit.
  • (3) Spectators were so closely packed that emergency services had to gather up a macabre jumble of body parts, and the final toll was never confirmed.
  • (4) Surely we could manage clothes banks as well, even if they do put jumble sales and charity shops out of business, which in turn are putting ordinary shops out of business.
  • (5) Within a year, however, its jumble of metal shops would be making bombs, the first generation of largely nationalist and tribal insurgents already being replaced by a more dangerous group of jihadi fighters.
  • (6) This statement is a jumble of buzzwords that makes no sense.
  • (7) He compounded the error by offering up a jumbled reply whereas Bill Clinton moved across the stage towards the questioner and spoke about the impact he had witnessed on people in Arkansas, where he was governor.
  • (8) Cascades of golden light overpower the sun, rising from a jumble of massive titanium forms piled on top of each other, part train crash and part explosion in a bullion vault.
  • (9) Promoted as a new way to make art accessible by removing the barriers between exhibition and mass consumption, it was criticised for turning art into a "jumble sale".
  • (10) Why keep daytime TV churning through the wastes of the day on both BBC1 and BBC2 when one channel could do the threadbare run of Angela Lansbury series and jumble-sale reality without anyone missing or caring?
  • (11) In experiment 3, significant effects of familiarity were also observed when the task was to distinguish intact faces from jumbled faces.
  • (12) The hall where it was held is only a stone’s throw from Jaywick , the jumble of former holiday chalets and potholed streets that is reckoned to be the poorest council ward in England: on the face of it, a symbol of the kind of deep social problems that tend to be synonymous with political apathy.
  • (13) We're going to fob you off with some old jumble from the attic."
  • (14) The route that is laid anew each year through the icefall, one of the most dangerous passages though low down the peak, has been largely destroyed and local Sherpa guides who specialise in preparing a path through the jumble of ice blocks and crevasses are reported to have refused to repair it.
  • (15) In the living room beyond, a toilet, bathtub and sink are clustered among a jumble of tools and building materials.
  • (16) To the east, across a deep railway cutting and a jumble of industrial sheds, lie the terraced streets of Leyton and Stratford, home to some of London's most deprived wards, where over a third of children still live in poverty .
  • (17) Jumbling remained an effective variable even when the subject knew where to look and what to look for.
  • (18) The test is also useful in monitoring recovery from jumbling.
  • (19) Nothing of it shows above ground; 20ft down is a confused, inaccessible jumble of rooms, corridors and frescoes, buried beyond the reach of the public, an enormous Tut's tomb with nothing of value in it.
  • (20) But look beyond this thin crust of decent homes – a block-deep Potemkin facade of regeneration – and a sea of jumbled shacks continues to stretch endlessly into the distance.

Macaronic


Definition:

  • (a.) Pertaining to, or like, macaroni (originally a dish of mixed food); hence, mixed; confused; jumbled.
  • (a.) Of or pertaining to the burlesque composition called macaronic; as, macaronic poetry.
  • (n.) A heap of thing confusedly mixed together; a jumble.
  • (n.) A kind of burlesque composition, in which the vernacular words of one or more modern languages are intermixed with genuine Latin words, and with hybrid formed by adding Latin terminations to other roots.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Beca is upping her game and is using beetroot too and making savoury macarons.
  • (2) At Aux Délices du Palais, customers in the long queue snaking to the door in the 14th arrondissement agreed that Teixeira and his family made exceedingly good bread, not to mention excellent macarons – for which they have also won prizes – and mouthwatering pâtisserie.
  • (3) Breakfast, which costs €18 extra, is served in the independently run restaurant-bar ( apotekrestaurant.is ) – where you can sample (and buy) tempting macarons, chocolates and desserts made by award-winning pastry chef Axel Thorsteinsson.
  • (4) Sue Series one, Edd [Kimber]blew everyone away with a macaron and now everybody is making them in week one, just to dress a bake.
  • (5) Cakes are worth a special mention: sticky banana and pumpkin loaves, homemade macarons – matcha, salted caramel – in jewel colours.
  • (6) Great in the afternoon for Le Tea Time: Lenôtre macarons, tea by Mariage Frères .
  • (7) Even within baking there's the view that a spelt sourdough is somehow more sincere than a miniature macaron.
  • (8) Facebook Twitter Pinterest Bake Off creates a fairytale landscape of tottering choux towers, cheesecake tiers, lady fingers, sponges and macarons and frangipanes.
  • (9) For the viewer, an hour in the Bake Off tent is like peeping through the window into a charmed land of plenty: a fairytale landscape of tottering choux towers, charlotte russes filled with trembling expanses of bavarois, gingerbread houses and cheesecake tiers and lady fingers and sponges and macarons and frangipanes.
  • (10) With precise judgment, a lot of practice and expert patience, the skilled kitchen craftsman learns to transform clouds of eggwhite into shiny-topped macarons, pools of molten chocolate into hard and gleaming tempered sheets, dusty heaps of flour and foaming yeast into elaborate plaits of yielding bread.
  • (11) The life and soul of the quartier is rue des Martyrs , a bustling street lined with shops and a paradise for foodies, whether you're looking for rustic figatellu sausage, speciality cheeses and charcuterie at Terra Corsa, a Corsican delicatessen at no 42, or mouth-watering champagne and passion fruit macarons from master boulanger-pâtissier, Arnaud Delmontel at no 39.

Words possibly related to "macaronic"