There are more than 50 countries that export coffee. They are near the equator, where the climate is conducive to producing coffee beans.
racy
(adjective) designed or suitable for competing in a race
blue, gamy, gamey, juicy, naughty, racy, risque, spicy
(adjective) suggestive of sexual impropriety; âa blue movieâ; âblue jokesâ; âhe skips asterisks and gives you the gamy detailsâ; âa juicy scandalâ; âa naughty winkâ; ânaughty wordsâ; âracy anecdotesâ; âa risque storyâ; âspicy gossipâ
lively, racy
(adjective) full of zest or vigor; âa racy literary styleâ
racy, full-bodied, rich, robust
(adjective) marked by richness and fullness of flavor; âa rich ruby portâ; âfull-bodied winesâ; âa robust claretâ; âthe robust flavor of fresh-brewed coffeeâ
Source: WordNet® 3.1
racy (comparative racier, superlative raciest)
Mildly risqué.
Having a strong flavor indicating origin; of distinct characteristic taste; tasting of the soil.
Synonyms: fresh, rich
(figurative, by extension) Exciting to the mind by a strong or distinctive character of thought or language; peculiar and piquant; fresh and lively.
(programming) Involving a data race or a race condition.
• Cary, Cray, cary, cray
Source: Wiktionary
Ra"cy, a. [Compar. Racier; superl. Raciest.] Etym: [From Race a tribe, family.]
1. Having a strong flavor indicating origin; of distinct characteristic taste; tasting of the soil; hence, fresh; rich. The racy wine, Late from the mellowing cask restored to light. Pope.
2. Hence: Exciting to the mental taste by a strong or distinctive character of thought or language; peculiar and piquant; fresh and lively. Our raciest, most idiomatic popular word. M. Arnold. Burn's English, though not so racy as his Scotch, is generally correct. H. Coleridge. The rich and racy humor of a natural converser fresh from the plow. Prof. Wilson.
Syn.
– Spicy; spirited; lively; smart; piquant.
– Racy, Spicy. Racy refers primarily to that peculiar flavor which certain wines are supposed to derive from the soil in which the grapes were grown; and hence we call a style or production racy when it "smacks of the soil," or has an uncommon degree of natural freshness and distinctiveness of thought and language. Spicy, when applied, has reference to a spirit and pungency added by art, seasoning the matter like a condiment. It does not, like racy, suggest native peculiarity. A spicy article in a magazine; a spicy retort. Racy in conversation; a racy remark. Rich, racy verses, in which we The soil from which they come, taste, smell, and see. Cowley.
Source: Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary 1913 Edition
22 February 2025
(noun) the use of closed-class words instead of inflections: e.g., âthe father of the brideâ instead of âthe brideâs fatherâ
There are more than 50 countries that export coffee. They are near the equator, where the climate is conducive to producing coffee beans.