Eggs pl.蛋,鸡蛋
- Sort these eggs by size.
将这些蛋按大小分好。 - My mother bought a dozen eggs.
我妈妈买了一打鸡蛋。
eggs[ noun ]
oval reproductive body of a fowl (especially a hen) used as food
<noun.food>
- Eggs were 68.5 cents per dozen, compared with 65.6 in August and 71.2 in September 1989.
- Eggs extracted surgically from a woman are fertilized in a laboratory dish and then can be implanted back in the woman.
- Eggs, butter and flour are also rationed in some areas.
- Last week, the Food and Drug Administration ordered C.R. Eggs to stop selling its eggs, citing concerns about the eggs' high iodine levels and cholesterol claims.
- Eggs were 60.2 cents a dozen, compared with 71.4 cents a dozen in April and 62.6 cents a year ago.
- When the company this month announced lower-than-forecast sales of Easy Eggs, the stock dropped nearly 19%.
- Eggs have cost about 25 cents a pound.
- These federal-court suits accuse the officers of failing to disclose that Easy Eggs were unlikely to sell briskly enough to justify all of Michael's production capacity.
- The company said that despite slower sales of its Easy Eggs product, it remained confident in the eventual success of the product.
- As president of the Michael Foods Egg Co. unit, Mr. Stafford said he will oversee development and marketing of a proprietary low-cholesterol egg as well as an ultra-pasteurized product called Easy Eggs.
- A company calling itself Golden Eggs introduced its first batch of egg-borne advertisements two weeks ago.
- He says C.R. Eggs had been advertising in test markets at a rate that would equal $80 million a year if projected nationally.
- Eggs Benedict may be outrageously high in fancy, big city hotels, but when police heard a Sunday brunch of one egg was going for $15.50 at a rural mobile home they figured someone was being stung.
- Jack Dreyfus, the owner of a large racing stable, once dubbed a horse Fried Eggs Over when he was told, at breakfast, that his sixth name submission for the beast had been denied.