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  1. Dictionary
    sweet tooth
    /ˌswiːt ˈtuːθ/

    noun

    • 1. a great liking for sweet-tasting foods: "add more sugar if you have a sweet tooth"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Apr 2, 2015 · From an idiomatic perspective, the expression was coined during the Middle Ages with the simple combination of two common terms. The second term, tooth, was already used idiomatically meaning 'taste, liking'. Sweet tooth (n.) : "fondness for sugary stuff," late 14c., from sweet (adj.) + tooth in the sense of "taste, liking" (see toothsome).

  3. May 21, 2020 · It also reminds me of the expression 'to have a sweet tooth', meaning you like or have a craving for sweet things. Urban Dictionary's definition of "sugar tooth" is also what you refer to in your post (opposed to "sugar teeth", which you imply), where a craving for something sweet is generalized to a craving for something you can't get enough of, or for something tantalizing.

  4. Nov 26, 2019 · An exocentric compound is one that is analyzed as lacking a head, or having an implicit head that is not any of the explicit constituents of the compound. In reference to a person, "sweet-tooth/sweet tooth" can be interpreted as an exocentric compound standing for something like "someone who has a sweet tooth". The implied head of the construct ...

  5. Nov 3, 2014 · The issue with using umami here is that it carries it's own meaning, the feeling of savoury or meaty. 1. If you really want to convey the specific idea of something that tastes both salty and sweet, like nuts dusted with both salt and sugar, just stick with sweet and salty, same as we use sweet and sour everywhere. 2

  6. You can say they have a sweet tooth. It isn't much shorter but it conveys the idea of people who have a craving for sweets. sweet tooth (noun) - a craving or fondness for sweet food Merriam-Webster "I have a sweet tooth, and if I don't watch it, I'll really get fat. "John eats candy all the time. He must have a sweet tooth."

  7. Aug 29, 2023 · 'Savoury tooth' also turns up a company making savoury protein bars. My take from this would be that 'savo(u)ry tooth' is a phrase that people will understand, and that they use, but is often used in direct contrast to 'sweet tooth' and probably gets invented anew when people are casting about for a term.

  8. Oct 25, 2017 · If you need an adjective, you can say that person is sweet-toothed, as mentioned by WS2 in one of the comments. sweet-tooth (noun) - "a strong liking for sweet foods" Examples from literature: "And I still had a sweet tooth, and on privy occasions when there was no man to see, bought candy and blissfully devoured it."

  9. sweet nothings n. colloq. sentimental trivia, endearments. 1900 Fazl-i-Husain Diary 20 May in A. Husain Fazl-i-Husain (1946) ii. 35 The sweet nothings so often talked of in the romantic descriptions. 1934 C. Lambert Music Ho! iii. 212 The blues have a certain austerity that places them far above the sweet nothings of George Gershwin.

  10. May 27, 2013 · Swaddled at birth in a Northern blanket, cutting his teeth on a Northern gum-ring, solacing bis sweet tooth on Northern candies, learning his letters from a Northern book, educated at a Northern college, learning his gentility and acquiring all his refinements in Northern social circles—he still looks upon the North as a foreign country, a region altogether plebeian and uncivilized, ...

  11. Eye-teeth. I had thought the term was hind teeth as well, but eye teeth it is.Wikipedia says:. In mammalian oral anatomy, the canine teeth, also called cuspids, dogteeth, fangs, or (in the case of those of the upper jaw) eye teeth, are relatively long, pointed teeth.