meat tooth

meat tooth
n.
A craving or fondness for meat.
Example Citations:
In a couple of months, I rediscovered my love for meat. Sausages, steak, buffalo wings, crab legs, brisket, pork dumplings, those chicken legs served at Dim Sum. Others craved chocolate or cheesecake; I had a "meat tooth."
— Kevin Chong, "Vegging out," The Vancouver Courier, September 10, 2003
"Dominion" is a horrible, wonderful, important book. It is horrible in its subject, a half-reportorial, half-philosophical examination of some of the most repugnant things that human beings do to animals, notably keeping them in the factory farms that have taken over the business of supplying America's insatiable meat tooth.
— Natalie Angier, "The Most Compassionate Conservative," The New York Times, October 27, 2002
Earliest Citation:
Seafood is hardly the only food product whose demographic profile skews toward the feminine — as Candler points out, women also eat more fruit and more mint-chocolate-chip ice cream than men do. But unlike these other foods, seafood may offer a unique way of connecting with men, and Tim Ryan, senior vice president of the Culinary Institute of America, thinks he knows what it is: appeal to their meat tooth.
"Men are attracted to different terminology than women are," says Ryan. "That's not a new marketing breakthrough, but we can apply it to seafood — we've found that men are attracted to names and descriptors that are more meat-like. A 'salmon steak' just sounds more manly than 'filet of salmon."
— Paul Lukas, "The Fish Business Trolls for Men," Fortune, July 6, 1998
Notes:
This term is a rhyming play on the well-known phrase sweet tooth, a craving or fondness for sweet food, which has been in the language for over 600 years (the Oxford English Dictionary's earliest citation is from 1390).
Related Words: Category:

New words. 2013.

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Look at other dictionaries:

  • meat tooth — /ˈmit tuθ/ (say meet toohth) noun Colloquial a craving or liking for meat. {modelled on sweet tooth} …  

  • tooth — [to͞oth; ] for v., also [ to͞oth] n. pl. teeth [tēth] [ME < OE toth (< * tanth), akin to Ger zahn < IE * edont (< base * ed , to eat) > L dens (gen. dentis), Gr odous (gen. odontos)] 1. a) any of a set of hard, bonelike structures… …   English World dictionary

  • Tooth — Infobox Anatomy Name = Teeth Caption = An adult human s teeth. Caption2 = CGI posterior view of teeth taken from inside of mouthTeeth (singular, Tooth) are small whitish structures found in the jaws (or mouths) of many vertebrates that are used… …   Wikipedia

  • Tooth (human) — For other uses of tooth or teeth , see Tooth (disambiguation). Teeth An adult human s teeth …   Wikipedia

  • tooth — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) n. fang, tusk, canine, incisor, molar, cuspid, bicuspid, eyetooth, grinder (inf.), chopper (inf.); tine, cog; taste, relish; fondness. See sharpness, convexity. II (Roget s IV) n. 1. [A dental process]… …   English dictionary for students

  • victimless meat — n. Meat grown from a tissue culture. Example Citations: But much of the work is provocative and, depending on your Brave New World tolerance, disturbing: creating victimless meat by growing tiny steaks from biopsied frog cells and then eating the …   New words

  • Super Meat Boy — Super Meat Boy …   Wikipedia

  • Sweet tooth — Sweet Sweet, a. [Compar. {Sweeter}; superl. {Sweetest}.] [OE. swete, swote, sote, AS. sw[=e]te; akin to OFries. sw[=e]te, OS. sw[=o]ti, D. zoet, G. s[ u]ss, OHG. suozi, Icel. s[ae]tr, s[oe]tr, Sw. s[ o]t, Dan. s[ o]d, Goth. suts, L. suavis, for… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • two-tooth — /ˈtu tuθ/ (say tooh toohth) noun 1. a sheep of either sex from about one year to one and a half years old, and showing two permanent incisor teeth. 2. the meat from such a sheep. –adjective 3. of or relating to such a sheep …  

  • demitarian — n. A person who cuts his or her meat consumption in half. adj. demitarianism n. Example Citations: Mr. Sutton, who is with the Natural Environment Research Council in Britain, said people in rich Western countries ate too much meat and could… …   New words

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