FOOD - 15 definitions found
Websters 1828 Dictionary 
Food FOOD, n. [See Feed.] 1. In a general sense, whatever is
eaten by animals for nourishment, and whatever supplies nutriment to
plants. 2. Meat; aliment; flesh or vegetables eaten for sustaining
human life; victuals; provisions; whatever is or may be eaten for
nourishment. Feed me with food convenient for me. Prov 30.
3. Whatever supplies nourishment and growth to plants, as water,
carbonic acid gas, etc. Manuring substances furnish plants with food.
4. Something that sustains, nourishes and augments. Flattery is the food
of vanity. FOOD, v.t. To feed. [Not in use.]
WordNet (r) 2.1 (2005) 
food
n 1: any substance that can be metabolized by an animal to give
energy and build tissue [syn: food, nutrient]
2: any solid substance (as opposed to liquid) that is used as a
source of nourishment; "food and drink" [syn: food, solid
food}]
3: anything that provides mental stimulus for thinking [syn:
food, food for thought, intellectual nourishment]
Dictionary of Ro 
food
- poboca
Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, 11th Edition (2003) 
food noun
Usage: often attributive Etymology: Middle English fode,
from Old English fōda; akin to Old High German fuotar food,
fodder, Latin panis bread, pascere to feed Date:
before 12th century 1.
a. material consisting essentially of protein, carbohydrate, and
fat used in the body of an organism to sustain growth, repair, and vital
processes and to furnish energy; also such food together with
supplementary substances (as minerals, vitamins, and condiments) b.
inorganic substances absorbed by plants in gaseous form or in water solution
2. nutriment in solid form 3. something that nourishes,
sustains, or supplies <food for thought> • foodless
adjective • foodlessness noun
Oxford English Reference Dictionary 
food n. 1 a nutritious substance, esp. solid in form, that can be taken into an animal or a plant to maintain life and growth. 2 ideas as a resource for or stimulus to mental work (food for
thought). Phrases and idioms: food additive a substance added to food to enhance its colour, flavour, or presentation, or for any other non-nutritional purpose. food-chain Ecol. a series
of organisms each dependent on the next for food. food poisoning illness due to bacteria or other toxins in food. food processor a machine for chopping and mixing food materials. food value the
relative nourishing power of a food. Etymology: OE foda f. Gmc: cf. FEED
Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner\'s English Dictionary 
food
(foods)
Frequency: The word is one of the 700 most common words in English.
1. Food is what people and animals eat.
Enjoy your food.
...supplies of food and water.
...emergency food aid.
...frozen foods.
N-MASS
see also convenience food, fast food, health food, junk food, wholefood
2. If you are off your food, you do not want to eat, usually because you are ill.
It's not like you to be off your food.
PHRASE: v-link PHR
3. If you give someone food for thought, you make them think carefully about something.
Lord Fraser's speech offers much food for thought...
PHRASE: usu PHR after v
English Explanatory Dictionary 
food
fu:d n. 1 a nutritious substance, esp. solid in form, that can be
taken into an animal or a plant to maintain life and growth. 2 ideas as a
resource for or stimulus to mental work (food for thought). øfood additive
a substance added to food to enhance its colour, flavour, or presentation,
or for any other non-nutritional purpose. food-chain Ecol. a series of
organisms each dependent on the next for food. food poisoning illness due
to bacteria or other toxins in food. food processor a machine for chopping
and mixing food materials. food value the relative nourishing power of a
food. [OE foda f. Gmc: cf. FEED]
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) 
Food \Food\, v. t.
To supply with food. [Obs.] --Baret.
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) 
Food \Food\, n. [OE. fode, AS. f[=o]da; akin to Icel.
f[ae][eth]a, f[ae][eth]i, Sw. f["o]da, Dan. & LG. f["o]de,
OHG. fatunga, Gr. patei^sthai to eat, and perh. to Skr. p[=a]
to protect, L. pascere to feed, pasture, pabulum food, E.
pasture. [root]75. Cf. Feed, Fodder food, Foster to
cherish.]
1. What is fed upon; that which goes to support life by being
received within, and assimilated by, the organism of an
animal or a plant; nutriment; aliment; especially, what is
eaten by animals for nourishment.
Note: In a physiological sense, true aliment is to be
distinguished as that portion of the food which is
capable of being digested and absorbed into the blood,
thus furnishing nourishment, in distinction from the
indigestible matter which passes out through the
alimentary canal as f[ae]ces.
Note: Foods are divided into two main groups: nitrogenous, or
proteid, foods, i.e., those which contain nitrogen, and
nonnitrogenous, i.e., those which do not contain
nitrogen. The latter group embraces the fats and
carbohydrates, which collectively are sometimes termed
heat producers or respiratory foods, since by oxidation
in the body they especially subserve the production of
heat. The proteids, on the other hand, are known as
plastic foods or tissue formers, since no tissue can be
formed without them. These latter terms, however, are
misleading, since proteid foods may also give rise to
heat both directly and indirectly, and the fats and
carbohydrates are useful in other ways than in
producing heat.
2. Anything that instructs the intellect, excites the
feelings, or molds habits of character; that which
nourishes.
This may prove food to my displeasure. --Shak.
In this moment there is life and food For future
years. --Wordsworth.
Note: Food is often used adjectively or in self-explaining
compounds, as in food fish or food-fish, food supply.
Food vacuole (Zo["o]l.), one of the spaces in the interior
of a protozoan in which food is contained, during
digestion.
Food yolk. (Biol.) See under Yolk.
Syn: Aliment; sustenance; nutriment; feed; fare; victuals;
provisions; meat.
Jargon File (4.3.1, 29 Jun 2001) 
Food
Ethnic. Spicy. Oriental, esp. Chinese and most esp. Szechuan, Hunan, and
Mandarin (hackers consider Cantonese vaguely de'classe'). Hackers prefer
the exotic; for example, the Japanese-food fans among them will eat with
gusto such delicacies as fugu (poisonous pufferfish) and whale. Thai food
has experienced flurries of popularity. Where available, high-quality
Jewish delicatessen food is much esteemed. A visible minority of
Southwestern and Pacific Coast hackers prefers Mexican.
For those all-night hacks, pizza and microwaved burritos are big.
Interestingly, though the mainstream culture has tended to think of hackers
as incorrigible junk-food junkies, many have at least mildly health-foodist
attitudes and are fairly discriminating about what they eat. This may be
generational; anecdotal evidence suggests that the stereotype was more on
the mark before the early 1980s.
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia 
FOOD
food:
I. VEGETABLE FOODS
1. Primitive Habits
2. Cereals
3. Leguminous Plants
4. Food of Trees
II. ANIMAL FOOD
LITERATURE
In a previous article (see BREAD) it has been shown that in the Bible
"bread" usually stands for food in general and how this came to be so. In
a complementary article on MEALS the methods of preparing and serving food
will be dealt with. This article is devoted specifically to the foodstuffs
of the Orient, more especially to articles of food in use among the Hebrews
in Bible times. These are divisible into two main classes.
I. Vegetable Foods.
1. Primitive Habits:
Orientals in general are vegetarians, rather than flesh eaters. There is
some reason to believe that primitive man was a vegetarian (see Ge 2:16;
3:2,6). It would seem, indeed, from a comparison of Ge 1:29 f with
9:3 f that Divine permission to eat the flesh of animals was first given to
Noah after the Deluge, and then only on condition of drawing off the blood
in a prescribed way (compare the kosher (kasher) meat of the Jews of today).
2. Cereals:
The chief place among the foodstuffs of Orientals must be accorded to the
cereals, included in the American Standard Revised Version under the generic
term "grain," in the King James Version and the English Revised Version
"corn." The two most important of these in the nearer East are wheat (chiTTah)
and barley (se`orim). The most primitive way of using the wheat as food
was to pluck the (Le 23:14; 2Ki 4:42), remove the husks by rubbing
in the hands (De 23:25; Mt 12:1), and eat the grains raw. A common
practice in all lands and periods, observed by the fellaheen of Syria today,
has been to parch or roast the ears and eat the grain not ground. This is
the parched corn (the American Standard Revised Version "'grain") so often
mentioned in the Old Testament, which with bread and vinegar (sour wine)
constituted the meal of the reapers to which Boaz invited Ru (Ru 2:14).
Later it became customary to grind the wheat into flour (kemach), and, by
bolting it with a fine sieve, to obtain the "fine flour" (coleth) of our
English Versions of the Bible, which, of course, was then made into "bread"
(which see), either without leaven (matstsah) or with (lechem chamets Le
7:13).
Meal, both of wheat and of barley, was prepared in very early times by means
of the primitive rubbing-stones, which excavations at Lachish, Gezer and
elsewhere show survived the introduction of the hand-mill (see MILL; Compare
PEFS, 1902, 326). Barley (se`orim) has always furnished the principal food
of the poorer classes, and, like wheat, has been made into bread (Jud
7:13; Joh 6:9,13). Less frequently millet (Eze 4:9) and spelt
(kuccemeth; see FITCHES) were so used. (For details of baking, bread-making,
etc., see BREAD. III, 1,2,3.)
3. Leguminous Plants:
Vegetable foods of the pulse family (leguminosae) are represented in the
Old Testament chiefly by lentils and beans. The pulse of Da 1:12
(zero`im) denotes edible "herbs" in general (Revised Version margin, compare
Isa 61:11, "things that are sown"). The lentils (`adhashim) were and
are considered very toothsome and nutritious. It was of "red lentils" that
Jacob brewed his fateful pottage (Ge 25:29,34), a stew, probably,
in which the lentils were flavored with onions and other ingredients, as we
find it done in Syria today. Lentils, beans, cereals, etc., were sometimes
ground and mixed and made into bread (Eze 4:9). I found them at Gaza
roasted also, and eaten with oil and salt, like parched corn.
The children of Israel, when in the wilderness, are said to have looked
back wistfully on the "cucumbers .... melons .... leeks .... onions, and the
garlic" of Egypt (Nu 11:5). All these things we find later were grown
in Palestine. In addition, at least four varieties of the bean, the chickpea,
various species of chickory and endive, the bitter herbs of the Passover ritual
(Ex 12:8), mustard (Mt 13:31) and many other things available for
food, are mentioned in the Mishna, our richest source of information on this
subject. Cucumbers (qishshu'im) were then, as now, much used. The oriental
variety is much less fibrous and more succulent. and digestible than ours,
and supplies the thirsty traveler often with a fine substitute for water where
water is scarce or bad. The poor in such cities as Cairo, Beirut and Damascus
live largely on bread and cucumbers or melons. The cucumbers are eaten raw,
with or without salt, between meals, but also often stuffed and cooked and
eaten at meal time. Onions (betsalim), garlic (shummim) and leeks (chatsir)
are still much used in Palestine as in Egypt. They are usually eaten raw
with bread, though also used for flavoring in cooking, and, like cucumbers,
pickled and eaten as a relish with meat (ZDPV, IX, 14). Men in utter extremity
sometimes "plucked saltwort" (malluah) and ate the leaves, either raw or
boiled, and made "the roots of the broom" their food (Job 30:4).
4. Food of Trees:
In Le 19:23 f it is implied that, when Israel came into the land to
possess it, they should "plant all manner of trees for food." They doubtless
found such trees in the goodly land in abundance, but in the natural course
of things needed to plant more. Many olive trees remain fruitful to extreme
old age, as for example those shown the tourist in the garden of Gethsemane,
but many more require replanting. Then the olive after planting requires
ten or fifteen years to fruit, and trees of a quicker growth, like the fig,
are planted beside them and depended on for fruit in the meantime. It is
significant that Jotham in his parable makes the olive the first choice of
the trees to be their king (Jud 9:9), and the olive tree to respond,
"Should I leave my fatness, which God and man honor in me, and go to wave
to and fro over the trees?" (American Revised Version margin). The berries
of the olive (zayith) were doubtless eaten, then as now, though nowhere in
Scripture is it expressly so stated. The chief use of the berries, now as
ever, is in furnishing "oil" (which see), but they are eaten in the fresh
state, as also after being soaked in brine, by rich and poor alike, and are
shipped in great quantities. Olive trees are still more or less abundant in
Palestine, especially around Bethlehem and Hebron, on the borders of the
rich plains of Esdraelon, Phoenicia, Sharon and Philistia, in the vale of
Shechem, the plain of Moreh, and in the trans-Jordanic regions of Gilead and
Bashan. They are esteemed as among the best possessions of the towns, and the
culture of them is being revived around Jerusalem, in the Jordan valley and
elsewhere throughout the land. They are beautiful to behold in all stages of
their growth, but especially in spring. Then they bear an amazing wealth of
blossoms, which in the breeze fall in showers like snowflakes, a fact that
gives point to Job's words, "He shall cast off his flower as the olive-tree"
(Job 15:33). The mode of gathering the fruit is still about what it
was in ancient times (compare Ex 27:20).
Next in rank to the olive, according to Jotham's order, though first as an
article of food, is the fig (in the Old Testament te'enah, in the New Testament
suke), whose "sweetness" is praised in the parable (Jud 9:11). It
is the principal shade and fruit tree of Palestine, growing in all parts,
in many spontaneously, and is the emblem of peace and prosperity (De 8:8;
Jud 9:10; 1Ki 4:25; Mic 4:4; Zec 3:10; /APC 1Macc 14:12). The
best fig and olive orchards are carefully plowed, first in the spring when
the buds are swelling, sometimes again when the second crop is sprouting, and
again after the first rains in the autumn. The "first-ripe fig" (bikkurah,
Isa 28:4; Jer 24:2), i.e. the early fig which grows on last year's
wood, was and is esteemed as a great delicacy, and is often eaten while it
is young and green. The late fig (te'enim) is the kind dried in the sun and
put up in quantities for use out of season. Among the Greeks and the Romans,
as well as among the Hebrews, dried figs were most extensively used. When
pressed in a mold they formed the "cakes of figs" (debhelah) mentioned in
the Old Testament (1Sa 25:18; 1Ch 12:40), doubtless about such as are
found today in Syria and Smyrna, put up for home use and for shipment. It
was such a fig-cake that was presented as a poultice (the King James Version
"plaster") for Hezekiah's boil (Isa 38:21; compare 2Ki 20:7). As
the fruit-buds of the fig appear before the leaves, a tree full of leaves
and without fruit would be counted "barren" (Mr 11:12 f; compare
Isa 28:4; Jer 24:2; Ho 9:10; Na 3:12; Mt 21:19; Lu 13:7).
Grapes ('anabhim), often called "the fruit of the vine" (Mt 26:29),
have always been a much- prized article of food in the Orient. They are
closely associated in the Bible with the fig (compare "every man under his
vine and under his fig-tree," 1Ki 4:25). Like the olive, the fig,
and the date-palm, grapes are indigenous to Syria, the soil and climate being
most favorable to their growth and perfection. Southern Palestine especially
yields a rich abundance of choice grapes, somewhat as in patriarchal times
(Ge 49:11,12). J. T. Haddad, a native Syrian, for many years in the
employment of the Turkish government, tells of a variety in the famous valley
of Eshcol near Hebron, a bunch from which has been known to weigh twenty-eight
pounds (compare Nu 13:23). Of the grapevine there is nothing wasted;
the young leaves are used as a green vegetable, and the old are fed to sheep
and goats. The branches cut off in pruning, as well as the dead trunk,
are used to make charcoal, or for firewood. The failure of such a fruit
was naturally regarded as a judgment from Yahweh (Ps 105:33; Jer 5:17;
Ho 2:12; Joe 1:7). Grapes, like figs, were both enjoyed in their natural
state, and by exposure to the sun dried into raisins (tsimmuqim), the "dried
grapes" of Nu 6:3. In this form they were especially well suited to
the use of travelers and soldiers (1Sa 25:18; 1Ch 12:40). The meaning
of the word rendered "raisin-cake," the American Standard Revised Version
"a cake of raisins" (2Sa 6:19 and elsewhere), is uncertain. In Bible
times the bulk of the grape product of the land went to the making of wine
(which see). Some doubt if the Hebrews knew grape-syrup, but the fact that
the Aramaic dibs, corresponding to Hebrew debhash, is used to denote both
the natural and artificial honey (grape-syrup), seems to indicate that they
knew the latter (compare Ge 43:11; Eze 27:17; and see HONEY).
Less prominent was the fruit of the mulberry figtree (or sycomore) (shiqmah),
of the date-palm (tamar), the dates of which, according to the Mishna, were
both eaten as they came from the tree, and dried in clusters and pressed
into cakes for transport; the pomegranate (tappuach), the "apple" of the
King James Version (see APPLE), or quinch, according to others; the husks
(Lu 15:16), i.e. the pods of the carob tree keration), are treated
elsewhere. Certain nuts were favorite articles of food--pistachio nuts
(boTnim), almonds (sheqedhim) and walnuts ('eghoz); and certain spices
and vegetables were much used for seasoning: cummin (kammon), anise, dill
(the King James Version) qetsach), mint (heduosmon) and mustard (sinapi),
which see. Salt (melach), of course, played an important part, then as
now, in the cooking and in the life of the Orientals. To "eat the salt"
of a person was synonymous with eating his bread (Ezr 4:14), and a
"covenant of salt" was held inviolable (Nu 18:19; 2Ch 13:5).
II. Animal Food.
Anciently, even more than now in the East, flesh food was much less used
than among western peoples. In the first place, in Israel and among other
Semitic peoples, it was confined by law to the use of such animals and birds
as were regarded as "clean" (see CLEAN; UNCLEANNESS), or speaking according
to the categories of Le 11:2,3; De 14:4-20, domestic animals and game
(see Driver on De 14:4-20). Then the poverty of the peasantry from
time immemorial has tended to limit the use of meat to special occasions,
such as family festivals (chaggim), the entertainment of an honored guest
(Ge 18:7; 2Sa 12:4), and the sacrificial meal at the local sanctuary.
The goat (`ez, etc.), especially the "kid of the goats" (Le 4:23,18
the King James Version), was more prized for food by the ancient Hebrews than
by modern Orientals, by whom goats are kept chiefly for their milk--most of
which they supply (compare Pr 27:27). For this reason they are still
among the most valued possessions of rich and poor (compare Ge 30:33;
32:14 with 1Sa 25:2). A kid, as less valuable than a lamb, was
naturally the readier victim when meat was required (compare Lu 15:29).
The sheep of Palestine, as of Egypt, are mainly of the fat-tailed species
(Ovis aries), the tail of which was forbidden as ordinary food and had
to be offered with certain other portions of the fat (Ex 29:22; Le
3:9). To kill a lamb in honor of a gue st is one of the highest acts of
Bedouin hospitality. As a rule only the lambs are killed for meat, and they
only in honor of some guest or festive occasion (compare 1Sa 25:18; 1Ki
1:19). Likewise the "calves of the herd" supplied the daintiest food of
the kind, though the flesh of the neat cattle, male and female, was eaten. The
"fatted calf" of Lu 15:23 will be recalled, as also the "fatlings" and
the "stalled" (stall-fed) ox of the Old Testament (Pr 15:17). Asharp
contrast suggestive of the growth of luxury in Israel is seen by a comparison
of 2Sa 17:28 f with 1Ki 4:22 f. The food furnished David and
his hardy followers at Mahanaim was "wheat, and barley, and meal, and parched
grain, and beans, and lentils, and parched pulse, and honey, and butter,
and sheep, and cheese of the herd," while the daily provision for Solomon's
table was "thirty measures of fine flour, and threescore measures of meal,
ten fat oxen, and twenty oxen out of the pastures, and a hundred sheep,
besides harts, and gazelles, and roebucks, and fatted fowl." Nehemiah's
daily portion is given as "one ox and six choice sheep" (Ne 5:18).
Milk of large and small animals was a staple article of food (De 32:14;
Pr 27:27). It was usually kept in skins, as among the Syrian peasants
it is today (Jud 4:19). We find a generic term often used (chem'ah)
which covers also cream, clabber and cheese (Pr 30:33). The proper
designation of cheese is gebhinah (Job 10:10), but chalabh also is
used both for ordinary milk and for a cheese made directly from sweet milk
(compare 1Sa 17:18, charitse hechalabh, and our "cottage cheese").
See MILK.
Honey (debhash, nopheth ha-tsuphim), so often mentioned with milk, is ordinary
bees' honey (see HONEY). The expression "honey" in the combination debhash
wechalabh, for which Palestine was praised, most likely means debhash temarim,
i.e. "date-juice." It was much prized and relished (Ps 19:10; Pr 16:24),
and seems to have been a favorite food for children (Isa 7:15).
Of game seven species are mentioned (De 14:5). The gazelle and the
hart were the typical animals of the chase, much prized for their flesh
(De 12:15), and doubtless supplied the venison of Esau's "savory meat"
(Ge 25:28; 27:4).
Of fish as food little is said in the Old Testament (see Nu 11:5; Jer 16:16;
Eze 47:10; Ec 9:12). No particular species is named, although thirty-six
species are said to be found in the waters of the Jordan valley alone. But
we may be sure that the fish which the Hebrews enjoyed in Egypt "for nought"
(Nu 11:5) had their successors in Canaan (Kennedy). Trade in cured
fish was carried on by Tyrian merchants with Jerusalem in Nehemiah's day
(Ne 13:16), and there must have been a fish market at or near the
fish gate (Ne 3:3). The Sea of Galilee in later times was the center
of a great fish industry, as is made clear by the Gospels and by Josephus In
the market of Tiberias today fresh fish are sold in great quantities, and a
thriving trade in salt fish is carried on. The "small fishes" of our Lord's
two great miracles of feeding were doubtless of this kind, as at all times
they have been a favorite form of provision for a journey in hot countries.
As to the exact price of food in ancient times little is known. From 2Ki
7:1,16 we learn that one ce'ah of fine flour, and two of barley, sold
for a shekel (compare Mt 10:29). For birds allowed as food see De
14:11 and articles on CLEAN; UNCLEANNESS.
Pigeons and turtle doves find a place in the ritual of various sacrifices,
and so are to be reckoned as "clean" for ordinary uses as well. The species
of domestic fowl found there today seem to have been introduced during the
Persian period (compare 2 Esdras 1:30; Mt 23:37; 26:34, etc.). It is
thought that the fatted fowl of Solomon's table (1Ki 4:23) were geese
(see Mish). Fatted goose is a favorite food with Jews today, as it was with
the ancient Egyptians.
Of game birds used for food (see Ne 5:18) the partridge and the quail
are prominent, and the humble sparrow comes in for his share of mention
(Mt 10:29; Lu 12:6). Then, as now, the eggs of domestic fowls and
of all "clean" birds were favorite articles of food (De 22:6; Isa 10:14;
Lu 11:12).
Edible insects (Le 11:22 f) are usually classed with animal foods. In
general they are of the locust family (see LOCUST). They formed part of the
food of John the Baptist (Mt 3:4, etc.), were regarded by the Assyrians
as delicacies, and are a favorite food of the Arabs today. They are prepared
and served in various ways, the one most common being to remove the head,
legs and wings, to drop it in meal, and then fry it in oil or butter. It
then tastes a little like fried frogs' legs. In the diet of the Baptist,
locusts were associated with wild honey (see HONEY).
As to condiments (see separate articles on SALT; CORIANDER, etc.) it
needs only to be said here that the caperberry (Ec 12:5 margin)
was eaten before meals as an appetizer and, strictly speaking, was not
a condiment. Mustard was valued for the leaves, not for the seed (Mt
13:31). Pepper, though not mentioned in Scripture, is mentioned margin
the Mishna as among the condiments. Before it came into use, spicy seeds
like cummin, the coriander, etc., played a more important role than since.
The abhorrence of the Hebrews for all food prepared or handled by the heathen
(see ABOMINATION) is to be attributed primarily to the intimate association
in early times between flesh food and sacrifices to the gods. This
finds conspicuous illustration in the case of Daniel (Da 1:8),
Judas Maccabeus (2 Macc 5:27), Josephus (Vita, III), and their compatriots
(see also Ac 15:20,29; 1Co 8:1-10; 10:19,28). As to sources of food
supply and traffic in food stuffs, for primitive usages see Ge 18:7; 27:9;
1Ki 21:2. As to articles and customs of commerce adopted when men became
dwellers in cities, see Jer 37:21, where bakers were numerous enough in
Jerusalem to give their name to a street or bazaar, where doubtless, as today,
they baked and sold bread to the public (compare Mishna,passim). Extensive
trade in "victuals" in Nehemiah's day is attested by Ne 13:15
f, and by specific mention of the "fish gate" (3:3) and the "sheep gate"
(3:1), so named evidently because of their nearby markets. In John's Gospel
(Joh 4:8; 13:29) we have incidental evidence that the disciples were
accustomed to buy food as they journeyed through the land. In Jerusalem,
cheese was clearly to be bought in the cheesemakers' valley (Tyropoeon),
oil of the oil merchants (Mt 25:9), and so on; and Corinth, we may
be sure, was not the only city of Paul's day that had a provision market
("shambles," 1Co 10:25 the Revised Version (British and American)).
LITERATURE.
Mishna B.M. i. 1,2 and passim; Josephus, Vita and BJ; Robinson's Researches,
II, 416, etc.; and Biblical Dictionaries, articles on "Food," etc.
George B. Eager
Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary 
Food
Originally the Creator granted the use of the vegetable world
for food to man (Gen. 1:29), with the exception mentioned
(2:17). The use of animal food was probably not unknown to the
antediluvians. There is, however, a distinct law on the subject
given to Noah after the Deluge (Gen. 9:2-5). Various articles of
food used in the patriarchal age are mentioned in Gen. 18:6-8;
25:34; 27:3, 4; 43:11. Regarding the food of the Israelites in
Egypt, see Ex. 16:3; Num. 11:5. In the wilderness their ordinary
food was miraculously supplied in the manna. They had also
quails (Ex. 16:11-13; Num. 11:31).
In the law of Moses there are special regulations as to the
animals to be used for food (Lev. 11; Deut. 14:3-21). The Jews
were also forbidden to use as food anything that had been
consecrated to idols (Ex. 34:15), or animals that had died of
disease or had been torn by wild beasts (Ex. 22:31; Lev. 22:8).
(See also for other restrictions Ex. 23:19; 29:13-22; Lev.
3:4-9; 9:18, 19; 22:8; Deut. 14:21.) But beyond these
restrictions they had a large grant from God (Deut. 14:26;
32:13, 14).
Food was prepared for use in various ways. The cereals were
sometimes eaten without any preparation (Lev. 23:14; Deut.
23:25; 2 Kings 4:42). Vegetables were cooked by boiling (Gen.
25:30, 34; 2 Kings 4:38, 39), and thus also other articles of
food were prepared for use (Gen. 27:4; Prov. 23:3; Ezek. 24:10;
Luke 24:42; John 21:9). Food was also prepared by roasting (Ex.
12:8; Lev. 2:14). (See COOK.)
Soule\'s Dictionary of English Synonyms 
food
n.
1. Aliment, nutriment, nutrition, sustenance, bread, nourishment, meat, provisions,
victuals, viands, diet, regimen, fare, cheer, commons, pabulum, subsistence, rations.
2. [For cattle, etc.] Feed, fodder, forage, provender.
English Explanatory Dictionary (Synonyms) 
food
fu:d n. nourishment, nutriment, aliment, sustenance, subsistence; foodstuffs, edibles,
eatables, viands, bread, victuals, rations, provisions, comestibles, Brit commons, Colloq grub,
eats, chow, Brit scoff, prog: Without any food for days, the survivors were near starvation.
Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0 
27 Moby Thesaurus words for "food":
aliment, bread, chow, comestibles, commons, eatables, eats,
edibles, feed, foodstuff, foodstuffs, grub, meat, nourishment,
nurture, nutriment, pabulum, pap, provender, provisions, rations,
scoff, subsistence, sustenance, tuck, viands, victuals
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