bread /ˈbrɛd/
  麵包,生計,食物(vt.)裹以麵包屑
  bread
  不中斷
  Bread n.
  1. An article of food made from flour or meal by moistening, kneading, and baking.
  Note: ☞ Raised bread is made with yeast, salt, and sometimes a little butter or lard, and is mixed with warm milk or water to form the dough, which, after kneading, is given time to rise before baking.
  Cream of tartar bread is raised by the action of an alkaline carbonate or bicarbonate (as saleratus or ammonium bicarbonate) and cream of tartar (acid tartrate of potassium) or some acid.
  Unleavened bread is usually mixed with water and salt only.
  Aërated bread. See under Aërated. Bread and butter (fig.), means of living.
  Brown bread, Indian bread, Graham bread, Rye and Indian bread. See Brown bread, under Brown.
  Bread tree. See Breadfruit.
  2. Food; sustenance; support of life, in general.
     Give us this day our daily bread.   --Matt. vi. 11
  Bread, v. t. Cookery To cover with bread crumbs, preparatory to cooking; as, breaded cutlets.
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  bread
       n 1: food made from dough of flour or meal and usually raised
            with yeast or baking powder and then baked [syn: breadstuff,
             staff of life]
       2: informal terms for money [syn: boodle, cabbage, clams,
           dinero, dough, gelt, kale, lettuce, lolly, lucre,
           loot, moolah, pelf, scratch, shekels, simoleons,
           sugar, wampum]
       v : cover with bread crumbs; "bread the pork chops before frying
           them"
  Bread
     among the Jews was generally made of wheat (Ex. 29:2; Judg.
     6:19), though also sometimes of other grains (Gen. 14:18; Judg.
     7:13). Parched grain was sometimes used for food without any
     other preparation (Ruth 2:14).
       Bread was prepared by kneading in wooden bowls or "kneading
     troughs" (Gen. 18:6; Ex. 12:34; Jer. 7:18). The dough was mixed
     with leaven and made into thin cakes, round or oval, and then
     baked. The bread eaten at the Passover was always unleavened
     (Ex. 12:15-20; Deut. 16:3). In the towns there were public
     ovens, which were much made use of for baking bread; there were
     also bakers by trade (Hos. 7:4; Jer. 37:21). Their ovens were
     not unlike those of modern times. But sometimes the bread was
     baked by being placed on the ground that had been heated by a
     fire, and by covering it with the embers (1 Kings 19:6). This
     was probably the mode in which Sarah prepared bread on the
     occasion referred to in Gen. 18:6.
       In Lev. 2 there is an account of the different kinds of bread
     and cakes used by the Jews. (See BAKE.)
       The shew-bread (q.v.) consisted of twelve loaves of unleavened
     bread prepared and presented hot on the golden table every
     Sabbath. They were square or oblong, and represented the twelve
     tribes of Israel. The old loaves were removed every Sabbath, and
     were to be eaten only by the priests in the court of the
     sanctuary (Ex. 25:30; Lev. 24:8; 1 Sam. 21:1-6; Matt. 12:4).
       The word bread is used figuratively in such expressions as
     "bread of sorrows" (Ps. 127:2), "bread of tears" (80:5), i.e.,
     sorrow and tears are like one's daily bread, they form so great
     a part in life. The bread of "wickedness" (Prov. 4:17) and "of
     deceit" (20:17) denote in like manner that wickedness and deceit
     are a part of the daily life.