FEED vs FEAST: NOUN
- A signal or program made by means of such transmission.
- The transmission or conveyance of published content, as by satellite, on the Internet, or by broadcast over a network of stations.
- The aperture through which such material enters a machine.
- An apparatus that supplies material to a machine.
- The act of supplying such material.
- The act of providing food, especially to an animal.
- A meal, especially a large one.
- The amount of such food given at one time.
- Food for animals, especially livestock.
- Material or an amount of material supplied, as to a machine or furnace.
- A certain allowance of provender given: as, a feed of corn or oats.
- A meal, or the act of eating.
- Pasture-ground: grazing-land.
- Food, properly for domestic or other animals; that which is eaten by a domestic animal; provender; fodder.
- Food for domestic livestock
- In mech.:
- A very large meal, often of a ceremonial nature.
- A holiday; a day set as a solemn commemorative festival.
- That which is partaken of, or shared in, with delight; something highly agreeable; entertainment.
- A festival; a holiday; a solemn, or more commonly, a joyous, anniversary.
- A festive or joyous meal; a grand, ceremonious, or sumptuous entertainment, of which many guests partake; a banquet characterized by tempting variety and abundance of food.
- A ceremonial dinner party for many people
- A meal that is well prepared and greatly enjoyed
- An elaborate party (often outdoors)
- Something experienced with great delight
- A large, elaborately prepared meal, usually for many persons and often accompanied by entertainment; a banquet.
- A meal that is well prepared and abundantly enjoyed.
- A periodic religious festival commemorating an event or honoring a god or saint.
- Something giving great pleasure or satisfaction.
- Something delightful
- A festival in commemoration of some event, or in honor of some distinguished person; a set time of festivity and rejoicing: opposed to fast.
- A sumptuous entertainment or repast of which a number of guests partake; particularly, a rich or splendid public entertainment.
- Any rich, delicious, or abundant repast or meal; hence, something delicious or highly agreeable, or in which some delectable quality abounds.
- Synonyms Feast, Banquet, Festival. The idea of a social meal of unusual richness or abundance, for the purposes of pleasure, may be common to these words. Feast is generic; specifically, it differs from banquet in the fact that at a feast the food is abundant and choice, while at a banquet there is richness or expensiveness, and especially pomp or ceremony. The essential characteristic of a festival is concurrence in the manifestation of joy, the joyous celebration of some event, feasting being a frequent but not necessary part: as, to hold high festival. See carousal.
FEED vs FEAST: VERB
- Profit from in an exploitatory manner
- Gratify
- Provide as food
- Feed into; supply
- Serve as food for; be the food for
- Take in food; used of animals only
- Support or promote
- Introduce continuously
- Move along, of liquids
- Provide with fertilizers or add nutrients to
- Give food to
- Partake in a feast or banquet
- Provide a feast or banquet for
- Gratify
- To partake in a feast, or large meal.
- To dwell upon (something) with delight.
- To hold a feast in honor of (someone).
FEED vs FEAST: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To transmit (media content) by means of a communications network or satellite, as for processing or distribution.
- To minister to; gratify.
- To support or promote; encourage.
- To supply as a cue.
- To pass a ball or puck to (a teammate), especially to set up a scoring chance.
- To eat. Used of animals.
- To be nourished or supported.
- To move steadily, as into a machine for processing.
- To be channeled; flow.
- To produce food for.
- To provide for consumption, utilization, or operation.
- To supply with something essential for growth, maintenance, or operation.
- To provide as food or nourishment.
- To give food to; supply with nourishment.
- To serve as food for.
- To experience something with gratification or delight.
- To partake of a feast; eat heartily.
- To give a feast for; entertain or feed sumptuously.
- To be highly gratified or delighted.
- To eat sumptuously; to dine or sup on rich provisions, particularly in large companies, and on public festivals.
FEED vs FEAST: TRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To delight; to gratify.
- To entertain with sumptuous provisions; to treat at the table bountifully.
FEED vs FEAST: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Be the food for
- Serve as food for
- Used of animals only
- Take in food
- Supply
- Feed into
- In founding, to supply extra metal to (a thick, heavy casting) while it is setting.
- To grow fat.
- To subsist; use something for sustenance or support: with on or upon.
- To take food; eat.
- To entertain; amuse.
- To supply for food, consumption, or operation: as, to feed out beets to cattle; to feed water to an engine; to feed work (something to be operated on) to a lathe or other machine.
- To graze; cause to be cropped by feeding, as herbage by cattle.
- To supply; fill the requirements of; furnish material to for consumption, use, or means of operation; provide with whatever is necessary to the development, maintenance, or working of: as, canals are fed by streams and ponds; to feed a fire, a steam-engine, or a threshing-machine; to feed a lathe (by applying to the chisel the object to be turned); vanity is fed by flattery.
- (idiom) (be off (one's) feed) To have lost one's appetite.
- To make a feast; have a feast; eat sumptuously or abundantly.
- To provide with a feast; entertain with sumptuous fare.
- To delight; pamper; gratify luxuriously: as, to feast the soul.
- Figuratively, to dwell with gratification or delight: as, to feast on a poem or a picture.
- (idiom) (feast (one's) eyes on) To be delighted or gratified by the sight of.
FEED vs FEAST: RELATED WORDS
- Sustenance, Feedstuff, Nourishment, Fattening, Food, Nourish, Forage, Feed in, Give, Grub, Prey, Provender, Feast, Fertilize, Eat
- Picnic, Bash, Shindig, Eid, Festive, Celebrations, Festa, Celebration, Meal, Junket, Feed, Festival, Banquet, Fete, Fiesta
FEED vs FEAST: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Foraging, Consume, Feeder, Sustenance, Feedstuff, Nourishment, Fattening, Food, Nourish, Forage, Give, Provender, Feast, Fertilize, Eat
- Bairam, Jamboree, Dine, Picnic, Shindig, Eid, Festive, Celebrations, Celebration, Meal, Feed, Festival, Banquet, Fete, Fiesta
FEED vs FEAST: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- RSS feed or my printables RSS feed on the same page.
- Analyze and apply information from a feed label and feeding directions to feed animals.
- This is a combination of the drop feed and needle feed along with an alternating presser foot.
- Variability may arise due to differences in feed quality, feed intake, and manure management.
- Feed solution, enabling mums to express, store and feed using the same bottle.
- When one feed is completed, another feed will be executed.
- Feed to excess, feed fudge, nonsense, platitude, moonshine, luxuriantly.
- Atom feed uses the has become dominant, with many sites that used to offer both feed types dropping the Atom feed format.
- Only one HD feed, simulcasting the East feed, launched prior to the shutdown of the West feed.
- Movie Feed TV Feed Video Feed App Feed Anime Feed.
- Epiphany is the feast day following the feast of the Holy Family.
- Feast of the Immaculate Conception, the Feast of the Annunciation and the Feast of the Assumption of Mary.
- The feast tithe, eaten by person themselves and their family in a feast at the sanctuary.
- When a wedding coincides with a major feast the readings for that feast must be respected.
- Passover, the Feast of Booths, and the Feast of Tabernacles and Feast of Trumpets.
- Imagine, to wake on Thanksgiving morning to a feast before the feast!
- Wine libation accompanied Tamid sacrifice, Feast of Firstfruits, and Feast of New Moon sacrifices.
- Fixed a bug where the Blood Feast node on Soul Feast did not actually convert any damage.
- Feast of Unleavened Bread, the Feast of Weeks, and the Feast of Temporary Shelters.
- Other names for this feast are Feast of Weeks, Feast of Harvests, or Pentecost.
FEED vs FEAST: QUESTIONS
- What are the best chickens to feed a homemade feed mix?
- Where is the Otter Co-op feed and pet feed located?
- Can laying hens eat both starter-grower feed and layer feed?
- What happens to feed produced in an integrated feed mill?
- What time of day should you feed chickens layer feed?
- Do chickens waste feed by tossing feed out of feeder?
- What is the average feed conversion ratio for creep feed?
- Is it expensive to feed chickens commercially produced feed?
- Should I feed hay or concentrate feed alongside fodder?
- Should I Feed my pigs ground pig feed or Berkshire feed?
- What is the feast day of Saint Pellegrino/Peregrine?
- What are the feast days of hripsimians and Kayanians?
- Is there a Saint Sebastian Feast&Carnival in Montclair?
- What does Babette's preparation for the feast symbolize?
- Is Pentecost a movable feast in the church calendar?
- What is the Feast of Tabernacles According to Zechariah?
- Is the Transfiguration a major feast for Anglicans?
- Was the Passover feast invented by anti-Christians?
- When did Yotam Ottolenghi make Mediterranean Feast?
- How much Fancy Feast grilled salmon feast should I Feed my Cat?