A taste of Meaning in English
expression
ˈeɪ/, /ə/ /ˈteɪst/ /ˈəv
uh TAYST uhv
æɪ/ /tˈeɪst/ /ˈɒv
uh TAYST ov
Definición
Used to mean a small experience or sample of something, often to let someone try or understand what something is like.
Uso & Matices
Common in both literal (food: 'a taste of cake') and figurative sense ('a taste of freedom'). Used to introduce new experiences. Often appears in 'give (someone) a taste of'. More idiomatic than 'sample' in non-food contexts.
Spanish: una muestra de - una probada dePortuguese (BR): um gostinho de - uma amostra dePortuguese (PT): um gostinho de - uma amostra deChinese (Simplified): 体验一下 - 尝试一下Chinese (Traditional): 體驗一下 - 嘗試一下Hindi: का अनुभव - स्वाद (अनुभव के रूप में)Arabic: لمحة عن - ذوق منBengali: স্বাদ - অভিজ্ঞতা (অল্প)Russian: вкус - небольшой опытJapanese: 味見 - 体験(少し)Vietnamese: nếm thử - trải nghiệm (một chút)Korean: 맛보기 - 체험 (조금)Turkish: tatmak - az bir deneyimUrdu: ذائقہ - تھوڑا سا تجربہIndonesian: cicip - pengalaman sedikit
Oraciones de Ejemplo
Would you like a taste of this cake?
basic
The students got a taste of university life during the open day.
basic
She had a taste of singing on stage for the first time.
basic
That vacation gave me a taste of adventure, and now I want more.
natural
Let me give you a taste of what we do here.
natural
After just one class, he got a taste of what real work is like.
natural