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lard

lard / lard / lard
NounTransitive Verb
past: lardedpp: lardeding: larding

This term carries a strong association with traditional cooking and animal fats, often evoking a sense of richness or heaviness. In a culinary sense, it is a specific ingredient used for texture, such as the flakiness in pastry, distinguishing it from general oils or butter. When used as a verb, the word shifts from a literal kitchen technique to a critical metaphor. To lard a piece of writing or speech suggests an excessive, often unwanted addition of elements, implying that the core message is buried under unnecessary ornamentation or falsehoods.

Meanings

Nounlard

Fat obtained from a pig, used especially in cooking.

"The recipe calls for two tablespoons of lard."

Transitive Verblard
[~ something]

To insert strips of fat into meat before cooking to keep it moist.

"The chef decided to lard the lean roast beef."

Transitive Verblard
[~ something with something]

To enrich or embellish a piece of writing or speech with a large amount of a particular thing, often excessively.

"He tended to lard his speeches with complex Latin phrases."

Related Words

Last Updated: June 18, 2026Report an Error