Milk+dry

  • 31Dry River (Jamaica) — Mouth 18°16′08″N 76°43′48″W /  …

    Wikipedia

  • 32dry milk — dry′ milk′ n. coo powdery milk from which about 95 percent of the moisture has been evaporated …

    From formal English to slang

  • 33milk somebody dry — milk/suck sb/sth ˈdry idiom to get from sb/sth all the money, help, information, etc. they have, usually giving nothing in return • By earning millions from racing and giving pennies back, the bookmakers are sucking the sport dry. Main entry:… …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 34milk something dry — milk/suck sb/sth ˈdry idiom to get from sb/sth all the money, help, information, etc. they have, usually giving nothing in return • By earning millions from racing and giving pennies back, the bookmakers are sucking the sport dry. Main entry:… …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 35Milk equivalent — is a measure of the quantity of fluid milk used in a processed dairy product. Measured on a milkfat basis, it takes about 21.8 pounds of farm milk to make a pound of butter, and about 9.2 pounds to make a pound of American cheese. Measured on a… …

    Wikipedia

  • 36dry — ► ADJECTIVE (drier, driest) 1) free from moisture or liquid. 2) not yielding water, oil, or milk. 3) without grease or other moisturizer or lubricator. 4) dully factual. 5) unemotional or undemonstrative. 6) (o …

    English terms dictionary

  • 37Dry Kids: B-Sides 1997–2005 — Dry Kids: B Sides 1997 2005 Compilation album by Embrace Released 31 October 2005 …

    Wikipedia

  • 38Milk River (Jamaica) — Basin countries Jamaica The Milk River is a river of Jamaica. See also List of rivers of Jamaica References GEOnet Names Server OMC Map …

    Wikipedia

  • 39Dry matter — The dry matter (or otherwise knows as dry weight) is a measurement of the mass of something when completely dried. The dry matter of plant and animal material would be its solids, i.e. all its constituents excluding water. The dry matter of food… …

    Wikipedia

  • 40dry — I. adjective (drier; also dryer; driest; also dryest) Etymology: Middle English, from Old English drȳge; akin to Old High German truckan dry, Old English drēahnian to drain Date: before 12th century 1. a. free or relatively free from a liquid… …

    New Collegiate Dictionary