recipes - Master This Word
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Master this word with our 5-step learning method – Learn English in English
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re- = again + capere = to seize. Originated from Latin, then passed to Old French before entering English. Imagine grabbing an old recipe book and joyfully seizing it again to cook a favorite dish.
Note 1: These definitions and etymologies are not standard dictionary definitions, but extended explanations provided to help with memorization and understanding of the actual application of words. Through this background information, we strive to make words more vivid and easier to understand, and help you remember their meanings in real life.
Note 2: LexiTalk designs the learning flow around the linguistics principle of “Comprehensible Input.” When learners encounter material that is slightly above their level but still understandable from context, the brain naturally absorbs the language. That’s why we keep every word inside authentic contexts, using examples and associations to help you understand it and use it flexibly.
Read the FAQ explanation of Comprehensible InputI pick up a recipe card, scan the steps, and set a pot on the stove. I push the heat a notch, adjust the timing, and move ingredients from bowl to pan. Steam rises and my hands find a steady rhythm, a quiet effort that feels right as flavors begin to wake. What started as lines on paper becomes a real plan I can use over and over, a process I keep turning into meals.
Recipe is a flexible term in English. Most people think of a recipe primarily as a set of instructions for cooking a dish, listing ingredients in order and steps to follow. But the word also appears in nonculinary contexts: a proven method or plan to achieve a result, or even a medical prescription in some phrases inherited from older usage. Learners often mix up the cooking sense with general manuals, or assume a recipe always implies exact measurements rather than approximate guidelines. Native speakers also use recipe metaphorically to describe a 'recipe for success' that can be adapted to different situations. Understanding these senses helps avoid wrong collocations like using recipe for medicines or calling a plan a recipe when you mean a proven method.
For English learners, recipe lives in both cooking and metaphor. Many languages separate cooking steps from plans or prescriptions, so learners sometimes assume recipe must specify exact measures or is never a metaphor.
What is the meaning of the word 'recipes'?
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