butter up - translation to greek
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butter up - translation to greek

DAIRY PRODUCT
Buttered; Butter pat; Lightly salted butter; Unsalted butter; Beurre; Whey butter; Cultured butter; Spreadable butter; Salted butter; 🧈
  • National Geographic]]'', March 1914.
  • Liquid [[clarified butter]]
  • Churning cream into butter using a hand-held mixer.
  • centrifugal]] cream separator sped up the butter-making process.
  • Woman churning butter; ''Compost et Kalendrier des Bergères'', Paris 1499
  • brownie]].
  • [[Hollandaise sauce]] served over white asparagus and potatoes.
  • Eastern-pack shape salted butter
  • Western-pack shape unsalted butter
  • Solid and melted butter

butter up      
v. κολακεύω
dress up         
  • Halloween costume party with a ghost
IN-PERSON OR VIDEO GAME INVOLVING COSTUMES OR FASHION APPLIED TO ONESELF OR A VIRTUAL MODEL OR CHARACTER
Dress Up; Doll maker (Internet); Dress up games; Dressed up; Frankendoll; Frankendolling; Dress-Up
ντύνομαι, βάζω τα καλά μου, μεταμφιέζομαι
sit up         
ABDOMINAL ENDURANCE TRAINING EXERCISE TO STRENGTHEN AND TONE THE ABDOMINAL MUSCLES
Sit up; Sit ups; Situp; Situps; Sit-ups; Sit-up (exercise)
ξαγρυπνώ, ανασηκώνω

Definition

butter up
v. (colloq.) (d; intr.) to butter up to (he keeps buttering up to the boss)

Wikipedia

Butter

Butter is a dairy product made from the fat and protein components of churned cream. It is a semi-solid emulsion at room temperature, consisting of approximately 80% butterfat. It is used at room temperature as a spread, melted as a condiment, and used as a fat in baking, sauce-making, pan frying, and other cooking procedures.

Most frequently made from cow's milk, butter can also be manufactured from the milk of other mammals, including sheep, goats, buffalo, and yaks. It is made by churning milk or cream to separate the fat globules from the buttermilk. Salt has been added to butter since antiquity to help to preserve it, particularly when being transported; salt may still play a preservation role but is less important today as the entire supply chain is usually refrigerated. In modern times salt may be added for its taste. Food colorings are sometimes added to butter. Rendering butter, removing the water and milk solids, produces clarified butter or ghee, which is almost entirely butterfat.

Butter is a water-in-oil emulsion resulting from an inversion of the cream, where the milk proteins are the emulsifiers. Butter remains a firm solid when refrigerated, but softens to a spreadable consistency at room temperature, and melts to a thin liquid consistency at 32 to 35 °C (90 to 95 °F). The density of butter is 911 g/L (15+14 oz/US pt). It generally has a pale yellow color, but varies from deep yellow to nearly white. Its natural, unmodified color is dependent on the source animal's feed and genetics, but the commercial manufacturing process sometimes alters this with food colorings like annatto or carotene.

Examples of use of butter up
1. That leaves Simon Hughes, the left–leaning party president who has used his post to travel the country and butter up Lib Dem activists.
2. Morales has engaged in a whistle–stop world tour since his landslide victory last month to butter up existing investors in countries such as Brazil and Spain and to court potential new ones, notably in China.
3. More here... 37,000 more health jobs face the axe, says secret dossier Doctor warns Blair NHS crisis will see Labour voted out of office The spin guide tells health service chiefs that they must butter up journalists to make them write more positive articles about the closure of beds and maternity wards.
4. He‘s thrown hundreds of Labour councillors to the wolves knowing he‘s got two years to butter–up the electorate before his head is on the block. – Ken Wyatt, Todmorden Amazing as a traditional Guardian reader I‘m surprised to find such an objective leader.
5. DJ School, one of a handful of places teaching DJ skills that have popped up across Moscow, also tells aspiring disc jockeys how to butter up TV and radio employees, a skill they‘ll need to get their tracks on the air.