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DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
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Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary
Hitchcock's Bible Names Dictionary (late 1800's)
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8 definitions found
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
milk
/ˈmɪlk/
奶,乳狀物(vt.)擠乳,榨取(vi.)產乳
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Medical Dictionary 英漢醫學字典
milk
/ˈmɪlk/
名詞
乳,奶
From:
Taiwan MOE computer dictionary
milk
竊取(通信線路上)消息
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Milk
n.
1.
Physiol.
A
white
fluid
secreted
by
the
mammary
glands
of
female
mammals
for
the
nourishment
of
their
young
,
consisting
of
minute
globules
of
fat
suspended
in
a
solution
of
casein
,
albumin
,
milk
sugar
,
and
inorganic
salts
.
“White
as
morne
milk
.”
2.
Bot.
A
kind
of
juice
or
sap
,
usually
white
in
color
,
found
in
certain
plants
;
latex
.
See
Latex
.
3.
An
emulsion
made
by
bruising
seeds
;
as
,
the
milk
of
almonds
,
produced
by
pounding
almonds
with
sugar
and
water
.
4.
Zool.
The
ripe
,
undischarged
spat
of
an
oyster
.
Condensed milk
.
See
under
Condense
,
v. t.
Milk crust
Med.
,
vesicular
eczema
occurring
on
the
face
and
scalp
of
nursing
infants
.
See
Eczema
.
Milk fever
.
(a)
Med.
A
fever
which
accompanies
or
precedes
the
first
lactation
.
It
is
usually
transitory
.
(b)
Vet. Surg.
A
form
puerperal
peritonitis
in
cattle
;
also
,
a
variety
of
meningitis
occurring
in
cows
after
calving
.
Milk glass
,
glass
having
a
milky
appearance
.
Milk knot
Med.
,
a
hard
lump
forming
in
the
breast
of
a
nursing
woman
,
due
to
obstruction
to
the
flow
of
milk
and
congestion
of
the
mammary
glands
.
Milk leg
Med.
,
a
swollen
condition
of
the
leg
,
usually
in
puerperal
women
,
caused
by
an
inflammation
of
veins
,
and
characterized
by
a
white
appearance
occasioned
by
an
accumulation
of
serum
and
sometimes
of
pus
in
the
cellular
tissue
.
Milk meats
,
food
made
from
milk
,
as
butter
and
cheese
. [
Obs
.] --
Bailey
.
Milk mirror
.
Same
as
Escutcheon
, 2.
Milk molar
Anat.
,
one
of
the
deciduous
molar
teeth
which
are
shed
and
replaced
by
the
premolars
.
Milk of lime
Chem.
,
a
watery
emulsion
of
calcium
hydrate
,
produced
by
macerating
quicklime
in
water
.
Milk parsley
Bot.
,
an
umbelliferous
plant
(
Peucedanum palustre
)
of
Europe
and
Asia
,
having
a
milky
juice
.
Milk pea
Bot.
,
a
genus
(
Galactia
)
of
leguminous
and
,
usually
,
twining
plants
.
Milk sickness
Med.
,
See
milk sickness
in
the
vocabulary
.
Milk snake
Zool.
,
a
harmless
American
snake
(
Ophibolus triangulus
,
or
Ophibolus eximius
).
It
is
variously
marked
with
white
,
gray
,
and
red
.
Called
also
milk adder
,
chicken snake
,
house snake
,
etc
.
Milk sugar
.
Physiol. Chem.
See
Lactose
,
and
Sugar of milk
(
below
).
Milk thistle
Bot.
,
an
esculent
European
thistle
(
Silybum marianum
),
having
the
veins
of
its
leaves
of
a
milky
whiteness
.
Milk thrush
.
Med.
See
Thrush
.
Milk tooth
Anat.
,
one
of
the
temporary
first
set
of
teeth
in
young
mammals
;
in
man
there
are
twenty
.
Milk tree
Bot.
,
a
tree
yielding
a
milky
juice
,
as
the
cow
tree
of
South
America
(
Brosimum Galactodendron
),
and
the
Euphorbia balsamifera
of
the
Canaries
,
the
milk
of
both
of
which
is
wholesome
food
.
Milk vessel
Bot.
,
a
special
cell
in
the
inner
bark
of
a
plant
,
or
a
series
of
cells
,
in
which
the
milky
juice
is
contained
.
See
Latex
.
Rock milk
.
See
Agaric mineral
,
under
Agaric
.
Sugar of milk
.
The
sugar
characteristic
of
milk
;
a
hard
white
crystalline
slightly
sweet
substance
obtained
by
evaporation
of
the
whey
of
milk
.
It
is
used
in
pellets
and
powder
as
a
vehicle
for
homeopathic
medicines
,
and
as
an
article
of
diet
.
See
Lactose
.
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Milk
v. t.
[
imp. &
p
. p.
Milked
p.
pr
. &
vb
. n.
Milking
.]
1.
To
draw
or
press
milk
from
the
breasts
or
udder
of
,
by
the
hand
or
mouth
;
to
withdraw
the
milk
of
.
“
Milking
the
kine.”
I
have
given
suck
,
and
know
How
tender
'
t
is
to
love
the
babe
that
milks
me
. --
Shak
.
2.
To
draw
from
the
breasts
or
udder
;
to
extract
,
as
milk
;
as
,
to
milk
wholesome
milk
from
healthy
cows
.
3.
To
draw
anything
from
,
as
if
by
milking
;
to
compel
to
yield
profit
or
advantage
;
to
plunder
.
They
[
the
lawyers
]
milk
an
unfortunate
estate
as
regularly
as
a
dairyman
does
his
stock
.
--
London
Spectator
.
To milk the street
,
to
squeeze
the
smaller
operators
in
stocks
and
extract
a
profit
from
them
,
by
alternately
raising
and
depressing
prices
within
a
short
range
; --
said
of
the
large
dealers
. [
Cant
]
To milk a telegram
,
to
use
for
one's
own
advantage
the
contents
of
a
telegram
belonging
to
another
person
. [
Cant
]
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Milk
v. i.
1.
To
draw
or
to
yield
milk
.
2.
Elec.
To
give
off
small
gas
bubbles
during
the
final
part
of
the
charging
operation
; --
said
of
a
storage
battery
.
◄
►
From:
WordNet (r) 2.0
milk
n
1:
a
white
nutritious
liquid
secreted
by
mammals
and
used
as
food
by
human
beings
2:
produced
by
mammary
glands
of
female
mammals
for
feeding
their
young
3:
a
river
that
rises
in
the
Rockies
in
northwestern
Montana
and
flows
eastward
to
become
a
tributary
of
the
Missouri
River
[
syn
:
Milk River
]
4:
any
of
several
nutritive
milklike
liquids
v
1:
take
milk
from
female
mammals
; "
Cows
need
to
be
milked
every
morning
"
2:
exploit
as
much
as
possible
; "
I
am
milking
this
for
all
it's
worth
"
3:
add
milk
to
; "
milk
the
tea
"
From:
Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary
Milk
(1.)
Hebrew
halabh
, "
new
milk
",
milk
in
its
fresh
state
(
Judg
.
4:19).
It
is
frequently
mentioned
in
connection
with
honey
(
Ex
.
3:8; 13:5;
Josh
. 5:6;
Isa
. 7:15, 22;
Jer
. 11:5).
Sheep
(
Deut
.
32:14)
and
goats
(
Prov
. 27:27)
and
camels
(
Gen
. 32:15),
as
well
as
cows
,
are
made
to
give
their
milk
for
the
use
of
man
.
Milk
is
used
figuratively
as
a
sign
of
abundance
(
Gen
. 49:12;
Ezek
.
25:4;
Joel
3:18).
It
is
also
a
symbol
of
the
rudiments
of
doctrine
(1
Cor
. 3:2;
Heb
. 5:12, 13),
and
of
the
unadulterated
word
of
God
(1
Pet
. 2:2).
(2.)
Heb
.
hem'ah
,
always
rendered
"
butter
"
in
the
Authorized
Version
.
It
means
"
butter
,"
but
also
more
frequently
"
cream
,"
or
perhaps
,
as
some
think
, "
curdled
milk
,"
such
as
that
which
Abraham
set
before
the
angels
(
Gen
. 18:8),
and
which
Jael
gave
to
Sisera
(
Judg
. 5:25).
In
this
state
milk
was
used
by
travellers
(2
Sam
. 17:29).
If
kept
long
enough
,
it
acquired
a
slightly
intoxicating
or
soporific
power
.
This
Hebrew
word
is
also
sometimes
used
for
milk
in
general
(
Deut
. 32:14;
Job
20:17).
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