Other Definitions
adjunct (dict)

Adjunct

In linguistics, an adjunct is a type of adverbial illustrating the circumstances of the action. It expresses such relations as time, manner, place, frequency, reason and degree, i.e. it answers the questions: where, when, how and why. For example: It's near Boston. (Place adjunct.) He spoke calmly (manner adjunct), since he had all the time in the world (adjunct of reason).
In beer making and homebrewing, an adjunct is an ingredient other than water, barley, hops, and yeast. Typically, adjuncts are used by beer companies to save money while still producing high alcohol levels (corn sugar is the most common adjunct). This usually is at the sacrifice of body and flavor. Most North American lagers are heavy in adjunct use and light to nil in flavor. Less typically, fruit, spices, honey, and wheat are used as flavoring adjuncts.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
newton moore
information pyramid
summit of the americas
shallow hal
chikungunya
st stephen's house, oxford
naniwa ku, osaka
elephantine papyri
jakobstad
pontryagin duality
list of oxbridge sister colleges
triple alliance (1717)
fred haise
hispalinux
christabel pankhurst
mesoplodont whale
swainson's hawk
duchy of warsaw
mainland japan
villanella
typed lambda calculus
nicholas knatchbull
charles reznikoff
neelix
irish republican brotherhood
mechanics institutes
pomeranians
pietarsaari
anchor exchange
gloriosa
john jervis, 1st earl of st vincent
guardian exchange
cubic kilometre
michael martin
curious labs poser
trojan room coffee pot
george birkbeck
breaststroke
hms conway
extremely low frequency
tom bosley
methacholine challenge test
william swainson
corniche