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jammy

/jam-ee/US // ˈdʒæm i //UK // (ˈdʒæmɪ) //

卡米,卡密,卡住了,卡米拉

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1

    jam·mi·er, jam·mi·est.

    • : British Informal. very lucky.
    • : British Informal. pleasant; easy; desirable: He has a jammy job.
    • : covered or filled with jam: jammy doughnuts.
    • : tasting like or having the consistency of jam: a sweet and jammy wine that tastes like cooked berries;jammy soft-boiled eggs.

Examples

  • Look for jammy, dark-berry fruit flavors and a hint of earth on a long, sweet-tasting finish.

  • The simple yet profoundly satisfying combination of salty, sweet, creamy, and jammy on sliced bread delivers every time — and it’s as low-effort and low-cost as a sandwich gets.

  • Quantum is opulent, jammy and velvety — the vinous equivalent of that joy you feel when picking berries and stuffing more in your mouth than in your basket.

  • They slump and crinkle and release some excess moisture, turning into jammy little nuggets.

  • If you plan on having steak one night, we’ve got a big jammy Aussie red to wash it down.

  • Toasted cheese and hot jammy pastry were faithfully served to the ragged host—but with no breathless haste.

  • We received yours, and are glad to hear poor Jammy is recovered so well.

  • There's ir Jammy; he's as big a wastril as ever stare't up a lone.

  • It ain't quite our up-to-date kibosh, o' course, but the way as that Sam chewed the rag was just jammy.

  • He was succeeded by his eldest son James, afterwards known as Jammy Lowther.