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Discover LudwigThe word "mince" is correct and can be used in written English.
It is usually used as a verb, meaning to finely chop food. Example sentence: I need to mince some onions to make the soup.
Exact(60)
When the mince has separated out and is fragrant but still juicy, remove from the wok and set aside.
Guests at its Bloomsbury or Chelsea hotels get a free continental breakfast, backpack and map of London, a VIP discount pass for Westfield shopping centre, and a panettone or mince pies when they book a one-night stay between now and 11 January.
"I wouldn't say go cheap but they can be clever at making a pound of mince last several meals.
So don't be afraid to have a mince pie or two!
Add the oil and mince to the pan, and fry for two to three minutes, breaking up the meat with the back of a fork.
This Christmas Eve, just like every year, we shall prepare for bedtime by hanging a stocking at the end of the bed, leaving a mince pie and a small glass of malt whisky for Santa (he prefers an aged Islay in our house; you can keep your sherry) and, of course, a carrot for Rudolph.
And FDR does not mince words, decrying the tyranny of "economic royalists" and confidently articulating the role of government.
It is the icing on the Christmas cake, the sugar-dusting on the mince pie, the angel at the top of the tree.
Speaking to me last Friday at the modernist 1990s building designed for the Strasbourg court by by Richard Rogers, Bratza did not mince his words.
Is there a clear line from the warm-hearted Lucy Beaumont, for example, through Rhod Gilbert, with his foam-flecked rages over seemingly anodyne topics such as mince pies and electric toothbrushes, to Spike Milligan, who was once described by his psychiatrist as "certifiably insane"?
5 Pot up your mincemeat One of the best bits of Christmas has to be the mince pies, and the home-made versions are better than anything you will find in the shops.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com