Aún no tenemos significados para "more succulent".
1A chicken breast, for example, tastes much more succulent poached in stock than roasted.
2Their flesh is much more succulent and wholesome than that of our wild boars.
3Farmed fish are often fattier and so more succulent.
4Evans has not attempted anything else, and probably the more succulent vegetables would require irrigation.
5They are then more succulent and juicy, and, if properly cured, form the sweetest food.
6The second is of a lighter green; and its stem is higher, thicker, and more succulent.
7They are not only larger, but thicker and more succulent, than those of the Prickly Spinach.
8Leaves larger, of a deeper green, thicker, and more succulent, than those of the foregoing variety.
9This allows the juices to recollect and settle into the meat and produced a more succulent result.
10The leaves are more succulent than those of the last named, and are produced in greater abundance.
11For this reason, the Spanish Super Cup appears a more succulent opportunity for silverware for Atletico than Barca.
12We have fresh captives from the wild-smallfolks whose souls are sweeter and more succulent than any wyrmling.
13The common spinach has its leaves round, and is softer and more succulent than any of the Brassica tribe.
14Hay cut and thoroughly moistened becomes more succulent and nutritive, and partakes more of the nature of green grass.
15It grows quickly after mowing, giving a denser and more succulent aftermath than any of the present popular tame grasses.
16The taste -hercheeks ached-was richer than the finest wine, more succulent than any ordinary mortal could ever be.
Esta colocación está formada por:
More succulent a través del tiempo
More succulent por variante geográfica
Estados Unidos de América