Brewed vs Cooked - What's the difference?
brewed | cooked |
(brew)
To prepare (usually a beverage) by steeping and mingling; to concoct.
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To foment or prepare, as by brewing; to contrive; to plot; to hatch.
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To attend to the business, or go through the processes, of brewing or making beer.
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To be in a state of preparation; to be mixing, forming, or gathering.
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* {{quote-news, year=2011
, date=January 11
, author=Jonathan Stevenson
, title=West Ham 2 - 1 Birmingham
, work=BBC
(obsolete) To boil or seethe; to cook.
The mixture formed by brewing; that which is brewed; a brewage.
(slang) A beer.
(British, NZ) A cup of tea.
(British, NZ) The act of making a cup of tea.
(British, informal) A hill.
Of food, that has been prepared by cooking.
Corrupted by conversion through a text format, requiring uncooking to be properly listenable.
(idiomatic) (of accounting records, intelligence) partially or wholly fabricated, falsified
(cook)
As verbs the difference between brewed and cooked
is that brewed is (brew) while cooked is (cook).As an adjective cooked is
of food, that has been prepared by cooking.brewed
English
Verb
(head)brew
English
Verb
(en verb)- Go, brew me a pottle of sack finely.
- Hence with thy brewed enchantments, foul deceiver!
- I wash, wring, brew , bake, scour.
- There is some ill a-brewing towards my rest.
citation, page= , passage=Grant may have considered that only a performance of the very highest quality could keep him in a job - and the way his players started the game gave the 55-year-old shelter from the storm that was brewing .}}