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Showing words for CURRY using the English dictionary
5 Letter Words for Curry
4 Letter Words for Curry
3 Letter Words for Curry
Definitions for Curry
[1] East Indian Cookery . a pungent dish of vegetables, onions, meat or fish, etc., flavored with various spices or curry powder, and often eaten with rice.
[2] any dish flavored with curry powder or the like: a lamb curry.
[3] curry powder.
[4] to cook or flavor (food) with curry powder or a similar combination of spices: to curry eggs.
[5] give (someone) a bit of curry , Australian . to rebuke, discipline, or criticize; harass.
[6] to rub and clean (a horse) with a currycomb.
[7] to dress (tanned hides) by soaking, scraping, beating, coloring, etc.
[8] to beat; thrash.
[9] John (Anthony), 1949–94, British figure skater.
[10] John Steu·art [stoo -ert, styoo -] /ˈstu ərt, ˈstyu-/ , 1897–1946, U.S. painter.
[11] a spicy dish of oriental, esp Indian, origin that is made in many ways but usually consists of meat or fish prepared in a hot piquant sauce
[12] curry seasoning or sauce
[13] give someone curry Australian slang to assault (a person) verbally or physically
[14] (tr) to prepare (food) with curry powder or sauce
[15] to beat vigorously, as in order to clean
[16] to dress and finish (leather) after it has been tanned to make it strong, flexible, and waterproof
[17] to groom (a horse)
[18] curry favour to ingratiate oneself, esp with superiors
[19] John (Anthony ). 1949–94, British ice skater: won the figure-skating gold medal in the 1976 Olympic Games
Words related to Curry
seasoning, sauce, condiment, relish, comb, groom, powder, clean
Words nearby Curry
currier, currier and ives, curriery, currijong, currish, curry, curry favor, curry leaf, curry powder, curry puff, currycomb
Origin of Curry
21250–1300; Middle English cor(r)ayen, cor(r)eyen < Anglo-French curreier, cognate with Old French correer, earlier conreer to make ready < Vulgar Latin *conrēdāre; see corody
Word origin for Curry
C13: from Old French correer to make ready, from Vulgar Latin conrēdāre (unattested), from rēdāre (unattested) to provide, of Germanic origin