Crossword clues for yum
yum
- Response to a tasty treat
- Positive feedback on a course
- Music to the cook's ears
- Music to a chef's ears
- Indication of good taste?
- Good remark?
- Fast food giant
- Diner's sound of approval
- Diner's exclamation
- Diner's compliment
- Complimentary culinary reaction
- Brand that owns Taco Bell, KFC, and Pizza Hut
- A smack of the lips
- "What a tasty cake!"
- "Very tasty!"
- "Very good"
- "This tastes good!"
- "This is so good"
- "These flavors!"
- "That's good eatin'!!!"
- "That looks tasty!"
- "That is gooooood!"
- "Smells great!"
- "My compliments to the chef!"
- "Mmmmm ..."
- "Mmm, delicious!"
- "Looks tasty!"
- "I can really taste the rosemary!"
- ''That looks tasty!''
- "Tasty!"
- "Dee-lish!"
- "Deee-lish!"
- Compliment to the chef
- Dessert reaction
- "Tastes great!"
- "Ooh, tasty!"
- "Delightful!"
- "Delish!"
- Comment while putting something away
- Indication of a pleased palate
- Delicious!
- Starters of yoghurt — usually most tasty
- "Sounds good!"
- "That hits the spot!"
- "This is delicious!"
- "That's tasty!"
- 'This is tasty!'
- "This tastes great!"
- Word of enjoyment
- Comment at the table
- "That's good!"
- "That's delicious!"
- "Mm-mm good!"
- "How tasty!"
- "How delicious!"
- Term expressing relish
- Taco Bell's parent company ___! Brands, Inc
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
exclamation of pleasure, attested from 1878.
Wiktionary
a. (context NZ English) delicious. interj. An expression used to indicate delight in regard to a certain food's flavor
Wikipedia
Yum may refer to:
Usage examples of "yum".
When old Gow Yum needed to go to San Francisco to sign certain papers before the Chinese Consul, permission had first to be obtained from San Quentin.
Smiling teeth popped and rattled as the two men embraced, full of loud throaty crooning greeting, yum yum yum and the voiced clearing of phlegm from pharyngeal tracts.
Qwilleran poured a stiff drink for Bunsen and opened a can of crabmeat for Koko and Yum Yum.
A ridge of land splits the city from east to west and on the top of the ridge is the temple of Yum Chac, the god of rain, whose palace these foolish people believe to be at the bottom of the cenote.
Theoretically, Camp Two should have been set up smack on the top of the temple of Yum Chac in Uaxuanoc.
Yum Chac stood proudly against the sky very much as it must have looked when Vivero first saw it.
Christ was not to be seen, but I remember the dark shape of the Temple of Yum Chac looming above the water and drifting away forever beneath the heavily beating rotors.
In smarter classrooms, chair backs are free from petrified Bubble Yum.
He turned off the bedlamp, and in a few moments two warm bodies came stealing into the bed, nosing under the blanket, Yum Yum on his left and Koko on his right, snuggling closer and closer until he felt confined in a strait jacket.
As he brushed their silky coats-- Yum Yum with hindlegs splayed like a Duncan Phyfe table, and Koko with tail in a stiff Hogarth curve--he thought of canceling his reservation, but an inner voice deterred him, saying: You're a two-hundred-pound man, and you're allowing yourself to be enslaved by eighteen pounds of cat!
As he brushed their silky coats, Yum Yum with hindlegs splayed like a Duncan Phyfe table, and Koko with tail in a stiff Hogarth curve, he thought of canceling his reservation, but an inner voice deterred him, saying: You're a two-hundred-pound man, and you're allowing yourself to be enslaved by eighteen pounds of cat!
Yum Yum was a female who hid her catly wiles under a guise of affectionate cuddling, purring and nuzzling, often extending a paw to touch Qwilleran's moustache.
As soon as Qwilleran sat in the twistletwig rocker to calm his anxiety, Yum Yum hopped into his lap and comforted him with small, catly gestures: an extended paw, a sympathetic purr.
Koko scrambled to his feet and raced him to the feeding station, but Yum Yum failed to report.
Qwilleran was sitting in Yum Yum's favorite lounge chair facing his guests, who were on the sofa in front of a folding screen.