Definition, Meaning & Anagrams | English word CORNS
CORNS
Definitions of CORNS
- plural of corn.
- inflection of corn
Number of letters
5
Is palindrome
No
Examples of Using CORNS in a Sentence
- Similar to other hydroxy acids, salicylic acid is an ingredient in many skincare products for the treatment of seborrhoeic dermatitis, acne, psoriasis, calluses, corns, keratosis pilaris, acanthosis nigricans, ichthyosis, and warts.
- The term originates from England comes from the treatment of the meat with large-grained rock salt, also called "corns" of salt, The Anglo-Irish created modern canned corned beef in the 1800s.
- "Man in the Middle" a song by David Bowie recorded with his band Arnold Corns as a B-side to "Hang On to Yourself" in 1972.
- "The Corns" residential towers, "1000 Years" housing estate, Katowice, Poland, designed by Henryk Buszko and Aleksander Franta, is completed.
- Corns and calluses are chunky tough layers of skin that develop on the foot to protect underlying skin from pressure and friction.
- According to Richard Usborne, Beach is a hypochondriac in Something Fresh and complains about corns, an ingrowing toenail, swollen joints, nervous headaches, and the lining of his stomach.
- Wilson unrolls his diagram to show a ravaged foot, covered in bruises, corns and bunions, which has been in an ill-fitting shoe.
- The king gives a festival, inviting everyone, and the witch sends off the husband with her younger daughter, throws a potful of barleycorns in the hearth, and tells the older stepdaughter that if she does not pick barley corns from ashes, it will be worse for her.
- Individualistic characteristics of the footprints like numerous creases, flatfoot character, horizontal and vertical ridges, corns, deformities etc.
- Ven / Katte pongal: rice, moong dhal, milk, salt, pepper corns, ginger, cummin seeds and curry leaves.
- Berry was born in Surrey on 12 July 1909, the eldest son of William Berry, later first Viscount Camrose and first Baronet Berry of Hackwood Park, and Mary Agnes Berry, née Corns.
- They stayed long enough to devastate the cornfields around the town, "thair oist in Linlythgow quha lay thair so lang that they distroyit the haill cornis around the towne bayth of pure and riche the space of ane myll round about" ― their host in Linlithgow who lay there so long that they destroyed the whole corns around the town both of the poor and rich the space of a mile round about.
- The pedicure involves soaking feet in hot water and using scalpels to remove dead skin, calluses, corns, and ingrown nails from the feet.
- The four silver Tyches (which were iconic versions of a presiding tutelary deity of Classical Greek mythology governing the fortune and prosperity of a city, its destiny) are represented with different attributes: military attire for the Tyche of Rome, a cornucopia for the one of Constantinople, sheaves of corns and the bow of a ship for the Tyche of Alexandria, and a male swimmer personifying the Orontes River at the feet of the Tyche of Antioch.
- The sprinkled corns on the cobs, which can also occur on the cobs of the Rheintaler landrace long were a mystery until American scientist and Nobel Prize winner Barbara McClintock discovered the mechanism of the “jumping genes” Transposons in maize, which were responsible for the sprinkled corns.
- Among her most famous dishes is the croquette, praised by the public and critics, but also other preparations such as monkfish with clams, fish soup from Echaurren, pochas a la riojana with tomato fry, "grandmother's meatballs", Hake with the romana, the lamb legs or the corns with calf snouts.
- Mystery Box Challenge 4: The contestants must make a dish with high quality ingredients such as, otoro fish, wagyu beef, fogras, taraba crab legs, truffles, Japanese bunching onions, asparaguses, strawberries, corns, gold leafs and caviar.
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