Synonym: change, dissolve, liquefy, soften. Antonym: freeze, solidify. Similar words: belt, shelter, svelte, homeland, smell out, smell of, homeless, extremely. Meaning: [melt] n. the process whereby heat changes something from a solid to a liquid. v. 1. reduce or cause to be reduced from a solid to a liquid state, usually by heating 2. become or cause to become soft or liquid 3. become more relaxed, easygoing, or genial 4. lose its distinct outline or shape; blend gradually 5. become less clearly visible or distinguishable; disappear gradually or seemingly 6. become less intense and fade away gradually.
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(181) Melt chocolate in bowl set over simmering water, brush over leaves.
(182) Melt the margarine or butter in a small pan, add the flour and cook over a low heat for 1-2 minutes.
(183) With his blue black curly hair and ice blue eyes, he could melt most women with a glance.
(184) She put a red plastic bowl on the refrigerator floor and sat down to wait for the ice to melt.
(185) Melt butter in heavy skillet or casserole large enough to hold potatoes in one layer.
(186) Melt butter in a pan, add caster sugar and dark brown sugar, mix and allow to cool.
(187) The snow began to melt and run in small rivulets.
(188) The salmon sushi and the yellowtail sashimi are likely to melt in your mouth, so pay close attention.
(189) These reservoirs behave as imperfectly elastic containers, expanding and contracting to accommodate fluxes of melt.
(190) Melt the butter in a small saucepan and cook the onion until soft and transparent. 4.
(191) All new shingle roofs need sun to melt the tar between the layers and make them stick together.
(192) Melt the butter in the same pot over medium heat. Add the shallots and cook until softened, about 1 minute.
(192) Sentencedict.com is a online sentence dictionary, on which you can find excellent sentences for a large number of words.
(193) Helped by salt and sunny skies, snow will also melt slowly even if the thermometer stays below freezing.
(194) In a large, heavy skillet, melt butter over moderate heat.
(195) Comics, newspapers and nudes under half-lifted desks melt into elusive textbooks.
(196) It was widely predicted that last season's First Division runners-up would melt in the white hot cauldron of Ibrox.
(197) In a large skillet, melt clarified butter and saute rabbit over moderate heat until evenly browned.
(198) Melt 2 tablespoons of butter in a small frying pan.
(199) Remove from the heat and allow to melt very slowly, stirring occasionally.
(200) Melt the remaining butter in a wide-bottomed pan, add the bamboo shoots, mangetout and seasoning.
(201) Rachel could have brought the snow in and let it melt soas to distract attention from herself.
(202) With capillary fittings, you can use a blowlamp to melt the solder.
(203) They melt and seep into other dreams, gaining strength, getting wider and deeper as they flow downhill, gathering debris.
(204) Meanwhile melt butter in medium pan and add carrots, shallot and mushrooms.
(205) Gently melt the low-fat spread in a saucepan and add the flour.
(206) In nineteenth-century Paris young revellers would melt down chocolate and smear horrified passers-by with what they took to be excrement.
(207) Melt the butter and then blend in the flour.
(208) Inward fervency wants to melt this icebound indifference but.
(209) Melt the butter in a large non-stick frying pan.
(210) At the mean time of the high-voltage current-limiting fuse cutting off the current, the fuse will melt and boil away, and it will generate electric arc with high temperature and high pressure.