Fresh basil may well be the signature herb of summer, perfuming our gardens and flavoring our foods with its delightful clovelike essence. |
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With soap still to be invented, the fragrant oils and waters were used in bathing and for perfuming hair. |
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I took my dad along as my dining companion to thank him for perfuming my childhood with the scent of jarred kimchi. |
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By rights, the ramp aroma should penetrate the shells in a day or two, effectively seasoning and perfuming the eggs in advance of cooking. |
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Behind the movements of a woman perfuming herself, a complex system of components is required to spray the desired perfume. |
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These songs do not announce themselves so much as arrive, perfuming the air with a lethargic serenity and then drifting away. |
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Use as perfuming ingredients of a compound of formula having a double bond in one of the positions indicated by the dotted lines. |
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Behind the counter is the pit, perfuming the room with the swirling, come-hither scent of beef and smoke. |
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But first her library of antiquarian books took over the second bedroom, and then her perfuming kit colonized the kitchen. |
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A perfuming composition or a perfumed article containing as a perfuming ingredient diethyl 1,4-cyclohexanedicarboxylate. |
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Use as perfuming ingredient of ethyl 3-methyl-2-oxopentanoate, of formula in the form of an optically active isomer or of a mixture thereof. |
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Many herbs grow throughout the desert and are well known to the Bedouin, who use them for seasoning, preserving food, perfuming clothing, and washing hair. |
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For pepper while delicately perfuming all your dishes. |
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Preparations for perfuming or deodorising rooms. |
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Use as a perfuming ingredient of a compound of formula in which R stands for a methyl or ethyl group, in the form of a mixture of the respective enantiomers or in the form of one of its enantiomers. |
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Incense of an exceptional size and subtlety, for special occasions: receptions, perfuming and decorating exhibition stands, galleries, spiritual sites. |
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White, pink, and purple heads of globe amaranth, along with peppermint, sage, and oregano hang from low rafters perfuming the air. |
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Far from being a Proustian acolyte perfuming the altar, he refused to be remotely pious about the great book he had brought into English literature — if anything, he seems to have generally preferred Pirandello. |
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