Definify.com
Webster 1913 Edition
Rice
Rice
,Definition 2024
Rice
rice
rice
English
Noun
rice (countable and uncountable, plural rices)
- (uncountable) Cereal plants, Oryza sativa of the grass family whose seeds are used as food.
- 2014, V. S. Rao, Transgenic Herbicide Resistance in Plants:
- Rice transformed with genes encoding human CYP1a1, CYP2B6, and CYP2C19 are more tolerant of various herbicides than non-transgenic rice plants, due to increased metabolism by the introduced P450 enzymes [Kawwahigashi et al. 2005a, 2007, 2008; James et al. 2008].
- (countable) A specific variety of this plant.
- 1922 April 1, L. Humbert, “America Has Hard Competition in France”, in Rice Journal and Southern Farmer, volume 25:
- First, we have the Italian rices; secondly, the rices of the French colonies of Indo-China and Madagascar, which are beginning to cultivate rices of very fine quality, altogether superior to those that were cultivated only a few years back.
- (uncountable) The seeds of this plant used as food.
- 1881, Mary Foote Henderson, Practical Cooking and Dinner Giving:
- Mold boiled rice, when hot, in cups which have been previously dipped in cold water; when cold, turn them out on a flat dish, arranging them uniformly; then with a tea-spoon scoop out a little of the rice from the top of each cone, and put in its place any kind of jelly.
- 1998, Noreen G. Dowling, Sustainability of Rice in the Global Food System:
- In sum, when a modern Japanese family and its members sit around the supper table eating their bowls of Japanese-grown rice, they are not simply indulging a gastronomic preference for short-grained and slightly sticky japonica rice over long-grained indica rice from Thailand.
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Holonyms
Verb
rice (third-person singular simple present rices, present participle ricing, simple past and past participle riced)
- (transitive) To squeeze through a ricer; to mash or make into rice-sized pieces (especially potatoes).
- 1961, Potato Chipper, volume 21, page 88:
- Following ricing, the potato mash proceeds to the drum drier where flaking is done.
- 2015, Lorna Seilstad, As Love Blooms (The Gregory Sisters Book #3): A Novel:
- Last night I riced the potatoes and added in the cream and butter while they were hot, so today wll we have to do is add flour and roll them out.
- (intransitive) To harvest wild rice (Zizania sp.)
- 1988, Thomas Vennum, Wild rice and the Ojibway people:
- When ricing, the Ojibway dress warmly at first; by midday they may shed some clothes as harvest toil combines with the hot sun of late summer to warm them.
- (rare) To throw rice at a person (usually at a wedding).
- 2006, Timothy Lee, Billy: A Gay Trilogy:
- As the reception ended the two newlyweds were riced to death and fled into an awaiting getaway car and drove off...followed by a stream of tin cans.
Etymology 2
From Middle English ris, rys, from Old English hrīs (“branch; twig”), from Proto-Germanic *hrīsą (“bush; twig”), from Proto-Indo-European *(s)kreys- (“to turn; bend; wind; move; shake”). Cognate with Scots reise, rice (“twigs; brushwood”), West Frisian riis, rys, Dutch rijs (“little branch; twig; osier; whip”), German Low German Ries, German Reis (“twig; sprig; shoot”), Swedish ris (“twigs; brush; rod”), Icelandic hrís.
Alternative forms
Noun
rice (plural rices)
- (now chiefly, dialectal, Scotland, Ireland) A twig or stick.
- 1834, John Johnstone, A systematic treatise on the theory and practice of draining land:
- To guard the bank from the impression of the water, a fence, OF STAKE AND RICE, may be made along the bottom of it next the sea, which will last till the surface on that side is sufficiently swarded, and the mound properly consolidated.
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- (weaving, obsolete) A bobbin or spool.
- 1892, John Cordy Jeaffreson, editor, Middlesex County Records, volume 4:
- {{..}} taken unlawfully from the same house five "machines called 'Engine-Weaving Loomes' worth thirty pounds, and two ounces of silke worth five shillings, and two joynt-stooles worth three shillings, and a pair of 'Rices to wind silke on' worth four shillings […]
- 1977, Marianne Straub, Hand weaving and cloth design:
- Swift (rice) Skein holder, hank holder.
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Related terms
- rise-wood/risewood
Anagrams
Old English
Etymology
From Proto-Germanic *rīkijaz (“mighty”), *rīkiją (“authority”), from Proto-Celtic *rīgiom (“kingdom”), from *rīxs (“king”) (compare Irish rí), from Proto-Indo-European *h₃rḗǵs (“king”). Cognates include Old Saxon rīki, Dutch rijk, Old High German rīhhi (German Reich, reich), Old Norse ríki noun, ríkr adj (Swedish rike noun, rik adj), Gothic 𐍂𐌴𐌹𐌺𐌹 (reiki) noun, 𐍂𐌴𐌹𐌺𐌴𐌹𐍃 (reikeis) adj. The Indo-European root is also the source of Latin rex.
Pronunciation
Noun
rīċe n
- power, authority, dominion
- kingdom, empire
- Cotton MS Tiberus B.i, Maxims II
- Cyning sceal rice healdan.
Ceastra beoð feorran gesyne [...]- The king shall hold a kingdom.
Cities will be seen from afar [...]
- The king shall hold a kingdom.
- Cyning sceal rice healdan.
- Cotton MS Tiberus B.i, Maxims II
Declension
See also
Adjective
rīċe
Descendants
Old French
Adjective
rice m (oblique and nominative feminine singular rice)
Spanish
Verb
rice