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canning

/kan-ing/US // ˈkæn ɪŋ //UK // (ˈkænɪŋ) //

装罐,制罐,罐头,罐装

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : the act, process, or business of preserving cooked food by sealing in cans or jars.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Those that do require a fee are often just to cover the cost of materials, such as for a canning class, Mosbacher says.

  • But, as they explain, “canning is incredibly dangerous, and the USDA takes it incredibly seriously.”

  • Bon Appétit isn’t the first mainstream publication to give out potentially dangerous canning advice.

  • This isn’t a problem that’s going to be solved until more canning capacity comes online.

  • Mobile canning companies have been in high demand, meaning it’s harder to slot time to get the beer into cans—and the cost of working with those services cuts into margins.

  • You can get anything into prison with a canning machine and a labeler.

  • Noel Canning comes out of the dysfunction surrounding appointments to the five-member NLRB.

  • Right now if you do a Google search for “spoiled teen” one name dominates the first few pages of results: Rachel Canning.

  • According to reports, an investigation into abuse claims led authorities to determine Canning was merely “spoiled.”

  • In Canning he found, or rather projected, “a genius, almost a universal one, an orator, a wit, a poet, a statesman.”

  • Everybody seemed to make money in the canning business and I thought it would be a good investment.

  • It was an unfair criticism, at least of Canning and Palmerston, tied though the latter's hands were by court and colleagues.

  • If they get both Canning and Peel, they may do; but I don't look to this.

  • The answer to Mr. Canning's famous riddle is "Cares—Caress."

  • "Canning circles" have been managed successfully in some parts of the country.