provender – מילון אנגלי-אנגלי
provender
n.
fodder, hay or grain used as animal feed; food, rations
FOOD
FOOD was an important artist-run restaurant in
SoHo, New York. FOOD was founded by artists
Carol Goodden,
Tina Girouard and
Gordon Matta-Clark. FOOD was considered one of the first important restaurants in SoHo. Other individuals who were involved with FOOD included Suzanne Harris and Rachel Lew. FOOD was a place where artists in SoHo, especially those who were later involved in
Avalanche magazine and the Anarchitecture group, could meet and enjoy food together. FOOD was considered to be both a business and an artistic "intervention in an urban setting." It has also been called a "landmark that still resonates in the history and mythology of SoHo in the 1970s."
Food
provender
Noun
1. food for domestic livestock
(synonym) feed
(hypernym) food, nutrient
(hyponym) blood meal
2. a stock or supply of foods
(synonym) commissariat, provisions, viands, victuals
(hypernym) food, nutrient
(hyponym) food cache
Provender
(n.)
Food or provisions.
(n.)
Dry food for domestic animals, as hay, straw, corn, oats, or a mixture of ground grain; feed.
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913), edited by Noah Porter.
About
provender
Synonyms and related words:
aliment, barley, bird seed, board, bran, bread, bread and butter, canned foods, cat food, cheer, chicken feed, chop, chow, comestibles, commissariat, commissary, corn, creature comfort, cuisine, daily bread, dehydrated foods, dog food, eatables, eatage, eats, edibles, ensilage, fare, fast food, feast, feed, fodder, food, food and drink, food supply, foodstuff, foodstuffs, forage, fresh foods, frozen foods, grain, groceries, grocery, grub, hay, health food, ingesta, junk food, kitchen stuff, larder, mash, meal, meat, merchandise, nourishment, nurture, oats, pasturage, pasture, pet food, provision, provisions, rations, scratch, scratch feed, silage, slops, spread, stores, straw, supplies, sustenance, swill, table, tucker, viands, victuals, vittles, wheat
Source: Moby Thesaurus, which is part of the
Moby Project created by Grady Ward. In 1996 Grady Ward placed this thesaurus in the public domain.