TASTED
Verb
tasted
simple past tense and past participle of taste
Anagrams
• destat, stated
Source: Wiktionary
TASTE
Taste, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Tasted; p. pr. & vb. n. Tasting.] Etym:
[OE. tasten to feel, to taste, OF. taster, F. tater to feel, to try
by the touch, to try, to taste, (assumed) LL. taxitare, fr. L. taxare
to touch sharply, to estimate. See Tax, v. t.]
1. To try by the touch; to handle; as, to taste a bow. [Obs.]
Chapman.
Taste it well and stone thou shalt it find. Chaucer.
2. To try by the touch of the tongue; to perceive the relish or
flavor of (anything) by taking a small quantity into a mouth. Also
used figuratively.
When the ruler of the feast had tasted the water that was made wine.
John ii. 9.
When Commodus had once tasted human blood, he became incapable of
pity or remorse. Gibbon.
3. To try by eating a little; to eat a small quantity of.
I tasted a little of this honey. 1 Sam. xiv. 29.
4. To become acquainted with by actual trial; to essay; to
experience; to undergo.
He . . . should taste death for every man. Heb. ii. 9.
5. To partake of; to participate in; -- usually with an implied sense
of relish or pleasure.
Thou . . . wilt taste No pleasure, though in pleasure, solitary.
Milton.
Taste, v. i.
1. To try food with the mouth; to eat or drink a little only; to try
the flavor of anything; as, to taste of each kind of wine.
2. To have a smack; to excite a particular sensation, by which the
specific quality or flavor is distinguished; to have a particular
quality or character; as, this water tastes brackish; the milk tastes
of garlic.
Yea, every idle, nice, and wanton reason Shall to the king taste of
this action. Shak.
3. To take sparingly.
For age but tastes of pleasures, youth devours. Dryden.
4. To have perception, experience, or enjoyment; to partake; as, to
taste of nature's bounty. Waller.
The valiant never taste of death but once. Shak.
Taste, n.
1. The act of tasting; gustation.
2. A particular sensation excited by the application of a substance
to the tongue; the quality or savor of any substance as perceived by
means of the tongue; flavor; as, the taste of an orange or an apple;
a bitter taste; an acid taste; a sweet taste.
3. (Physiol.)
Definition: The one of the five senses by which certain properties of
bodies (called their taste, savor, flavor) are ascertained by contact
with the organs of taste.
Note: Taste depends mainly on the contact of soluble matter with the
terminal organs (connected with branches of the glossopharyngeal and
other nerves) in the papillæ on the surface of the tongue. The base
of the tongue is considered most sensitive to bitter substances, the
point to sweet and acid substances.
4. Intellectual relish; liking; fondness; -- formerly with of, now
with for; as, he had no taste for study.
I have no taste Of popular applause. Dryden.
5. The power of perceiving and relishing excellence in human
performances; the faculty of discerning beauty, order, congruity,
proportion, symmetry, or whatever constitutes excellence,
particularly in the fine arts and belles-letters; critical judgment;
discernment.
6. Manner, with respect to what is pleasing, refined, or in
accordance with good usage; style; as, music composed in good taste;
an epitaph in bad taste.
7. Essay; trial; experience; experiment. Shak.
8. A small portion given as a specimen; a little piece tastted of
eaten; a bit. Bacon.
9. A kind of narrow and thin silk ribbon.
Syn.
– Savor; relish; flavor; sensibility; gout.
– Taste, Sensibility, Judgment. Some consider taste as a mere
sensibility, and others as a simple exercise of judgment; but a union
of both is requisite to the existence of anything which deserves the
name. An original sense of the beautiful is just as necessary to
æsthetic judgments, as a sense of right and wrong to the formation of
any just conclusions or moral subjects. But this "sense of the
beautiful" is not an arbitrary principle. It is under the guidance of
reason; it grows in delicacy and correctness with the progress of the
individual and of society at large; it has its laws, which are seated
in the nature of man; and it is in the development of these laws that
we find the true "standard of taste."
What, then, is taste, but those internal powers, Active and strong,
and feelingly alive To each fine impulse a discerning sense Of decent
and sublime, with quick disgust From things deformed, or disarranged,
or gross In species This, nor gems, nor stores of gold, Nor purple
state, nor culture, can bestow, But God alone, when first his active
hand Imprints the secret bias of the soul. Akenside.
Taste of buds, or Taste of goblets (Anat.), the flask-shaped end
organs of taste in the epithelium of the tongue. They are made up of
modified epithelial cells arranged somewhat like leaves in a bud.
Source: Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary 1913 Edition