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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
crusty
adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
crusty (=having a hard crust that is nice to eat)
▪ Serve the soup with crusty bread.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
bread
▪ Adjust seasoning, serve hot with salad and crusty bread.
▪ Dressed, warm, I move towards crusty bread, fragrant coffee, sweet oranges.
▪ Superb apple pie with sultanas and cloves, interspersed with crusty bread sandwiches of every description.
▪ Anyone who has tasted the sourdough bread made in San Francisco knows about chewy, crusty bread.
▪ A big bowl of salad, some crusty bread and fresh fruit is all you would need to serve alongside.
▪ Inside, under flickering rushlight, on a long wooden table scrubbed to whiteness, were the first trays of crusty bread.
▪ Garnish with sprigs of parsley or a few fresh tarragon leaves and serve with crusty bread.
▪ Serve with parmesan and crusty bread.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ a crusty old Kansas farmer
▪ There was a crusty ring around the rim of the ketchup bottle.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Adjust seasoning, serve hot with salad and crusty bread.
▪ Anyone who has tasted the sourdough bread made in San Francisco knows about chewy, crusty bread.
▪ Meals begin with a tall loaf of crusty sourdough bread.
▪ Serve with crusty rolls and salad.
▪ The bread is then toasted over hot embers until it is crusty.
▪ The cream paint was beginning to yellow; a couple of crusty, filling-station mugs stood on top of a metal filing cabinet.
▪ These businessmen are crusty, rough-edged fellows trying to survive in deadly earnest competition with companies much bigger than theirs.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Crusty

Crusty \Crust"y\ (-[y^]), a.

  1. Having the nature of crust; pertaining to a hard covering; as, a crusty coat; a crusty surface or substance.

  2. [Possibly a corruption of cursty. Cf. Curst, Curstness.] Having a hard exterior, or a short, rough manner, though kind at heart; snappish; peevish; surly.

    Thou crusty batch of nature, what's the news?
    --Shak.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
crusty

c.1400, from crust (n.) + -y (2). Figurative use, of persons, "short-tempered," is from 1560s.

Wiktionary
crusty

a. 1 Pertaining to or having a crust, as, for example, in the case of bread. 2 (context figuratively of a person or behavior English) short-tempered and gruff but, sometimes, with a harmless or benign inner nature; peevish, surly, harsh. n. 1 (context chiefly British English) A tramp or homeless young person with poor cleanliness. 2 (context slang English) dry eye mucus. 3 (context chiefly UK English) A member of an urban subculture with roots in punk and grebo, characterized by antiestablishment attitudes and an unkempt appearance.

WordNet
crusty
  1. adj. having a hardened crust as a covering [syn: crusted, encrusted, crustlike]

  2. brusque and surly and forbidding; "crusty remarks"; "a crusty old man"; "his curmudgeonly temper"; "gruff manner"; "a gruff reply" [syn: curmudgeonly, gruff, ill-humored, ill-humoured]

  3. [also: crustiest, crustier]

Usage examples of "crusty".

The crusty Sperren jabbered aimlessly about supposed civilians who disguised themselves as Green Riders and foolishly risked their lives to deliver unimportant messages to the king.

Then he centered again and reached out to draw power from the crusty loam of the floor and the tree roots high above.

Hecate Brinstone had revealed a talent for baking bread, and her braided challahs, marzipan-filled stollens and crusty ciabattas had emerged from the depths of the range, causing Marie Bain to mutter bitterly into her soiled handkerchief as she ostentatiously buttered herself a stale slice of shop-bought white.

He may also perceive a resemblance in the wine to the studious mind, which is the obverse of our mortality, and throws off acids and crusty particles in the piling of the years, until it is fulgent by clarity.

Cajun gumbo, crusty French bread, dandelion-vinegar salad, and some delicious concoction his aunt fancifully called Blueberry Huckle Buckle.

Then twenty-two years ago, after nearly twenty years of ill-tempered confrontation with his fellow theorists, he had, with characteristic abruptness, resigned from his position at Cambridge and retreated to Launde Abbey to pursue his theories without carping interference from lesser minds, his brilliance and loud vocal intolerance of the dry, crusty world endemic to academia creating a media legend of Bohemian eccentricity in the process.

Marc Moise sat down in the chair before the main viewer, trying to reconcile the crusty voice that had spoken to him with the childhood memory of Uncle Sam Beasley.

Nate took a bite of his sandwich, meatballs and mozzarella on good crusty French bread.

Once that purchase was complete, he began gathering up other vegetables, ripe pears, a gnarled wedge of pecorino, and a crusty loaf of pane toscano.

Reaching Phage, the crone bowed her white head and executed a crusty curtsey.

And by the time you finished paddlingat Cape Sable or Snake Bight or the Ten Thousand Islandsyou would have also been among roseate spoonbills and white pelicans, eels and mangrove snakes, sawfish and redfish and crusty loggerhead turtles.

Most important, Smithback thought as his eye roved about, were the long tables along the walls groaning with smoked sturgeon and salmon, crusty homemade breads, huge platters of hand-cut San Daniele prosciutto, silver tubs of pearly-gray sevruga and beluga caviar.

It was amazing how easily and swiftly the shining shears snipped through the crusty rag around the wound.

Trilobites and ostracoderms, mostly, with a silvery smattering of teleostean fish, a slimy slither of sea-slugs, and crusty clusters of shelled molluscs and calcichordates.

By the landmarks she gives him - a vegetable stand, a pond rimmed with willows, a double silo close to the road - he feels his way through the tummocks and swales of red earth crowded with shimmering green growth, merciless vegetation that allows not even the crusty eroded road embankments to rest barren but makes them bear tufts and mats of vetch and honeysuckle vines and fills the stagnant hot air with the haze of exhaled vapor.