0 hard enough to be broken easily -- 脆的;易碎的
a crisp new £5 note/a crisp white tablecloth 平展簇新的五英鎊鈔票/平展的白色桌布
a crisp apple 脆生生的蘋果
3 a very thin, often round piece of fried potato, sometimes with a flavour added, sold especially in plastic bags -- 油炸馬鈴薯片
4 a sweet dish made from fruit covered in a mixture of flour, butter, and sugar rubbed together into small pieces, baked, and eaten hot -- 酥皮水果甜點心
apple crisp 酥皮蘋果甜點
The writing is crisp and the jargon is kept to a minimum.
The crisp, well-highlighted print inspires browsing and the discovery of many excellent sections beyond the definitions.
However, they are also assumed to be crisp numbers in the above equations if normalized.
The book is well presented, with a clean crisp look, and given that the book is hardbound it is very well priced at under £30.
Properties of production sets are also clarified by a crisper distinction between the physical and institutional.
Quite a number of regularities come with exceptions, and actually turn out to be more of a preferential than a crisp nature.
Constraints are crisp on the merchants' side (fixed prices) and on the consumers' side (the price should be "minimal").
One recipe for the snack 'scramble', for instance, calls for a package of 'doughnut-shaped oat cereal' and a package of 'bite-size crisp rice squares'.