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    Ab·sence
    /ˈabsəns/

    noun

  2. Learn the meaning of absence as a noun in English, with synonyms, idioms, and usage examples. Absence can mean not being present, not existing, or the lack of something.

  3. Learn the meaning of absence as a noun in English, with synonyms, idioms, and usage examples. Find out how to use absence in different contexts, such as work, school, or business.

  4. Absence - Yahoo Recipe Search

    3 Ingredient Chuck Roast
    Yummly
    A great addition to our rotation! The absence of any veggie transforms this into something different than the standard “ pot roast”. So easy! So yummy!!!
    Gluten-Free Lemon Layer Cake
    Epicurious
    If any cake could be called refreshing, this would be the one. Rich but light, it loses absolutely nothing from the absence of white flour.
    Smoked Salmon Dill Eggs Benedict
    Allrecipes
    Despite the absence of the traditional hollandaise sauce, this smoked salmon eggs benedict is really, really good.
    Healthier Slow Cooker Beef Stew
    Yummly
    really good, the absence of flour definitely makes the sauce thinner but it is still excel. Nothing I changed was using a bit less red pepper...
    P.f. Chang's Mongolian Beef (Gluten Free)
    Food.com
    A gluten-free version of the popular P.F. Chang's Mongolian Beef. (NOTE: Please check labels to verify the absence of gluten products, especially with the Corn Starch.)
    Vegan Jalapeno Poppers
    Allrecipes
    These savory jalapeño poppers are a great plant-based party or game day appetizer. Diced mushrooms add a "meaty" addition with the absence of bacon, and vegan cheese substitutes keep this appetizer vegan.
    Mad Cow Beef Stew*
    Food52
    *does not contain actual mad cow. I named this stew in an attempt to strike fear in the heart of a paranoid in-law. Despite the absence of any angry bovines, I find it delicious. I believe you will, too.
    Pink Citrus Madeleines
    Food52
    The heart of innovation is being able to see an object as just that – an object, and not one tied to or defined by a specific use. So we can stop seeing tea as an ingredient that only comes alive in hot water. We can see it as an ingredient that has a life, right from the box or bag it comes in, one that can blossom as leaves, and in the absence of hot water. And so the idea of using tea as a spice excites me. Where formerly it has only been a drink. Whether it is throwing a pinch in a batch of cookies, dusting a madeleine pan with some, spooning out teaspoonfuls to go in cake batter, or even tossing just-fried churros in fragrant tea and sugar, tea can take on new character, new life. These Madeleines are amazing – they are beautifully speckled with a variety of tea leaves and spices, from rosehip to orange peel, hibiscus, apple peel, lemon grass, lemon peel and grapefruit peel. And yes, I currently have 9 Meyer lemons in my kitchen – a wonderful gift from a friend who just returned from a US trip. Master Patissier, Eric Lanlard provides the skeleton for this bake in his plain madeleines, but this contest gives me the platform and inspiration for the innovation. My introductions are the brown butter, the citrus tea spice, and the meyers, in their entirety. As well as separating the eggs and folding in beaten whites for added lightness. And the pleasure is almost all mine. The rest is shared with you.... This will work with your favourite tea - I'm a sucker for citrus but a chai version came out very nice as well. Go with your flow.
    AK Cookies
    Food52
    This is a tough one. And by tough, I do not mean difficult, though I will note that I have never made these cookies myself—my wife, Hannah Clark, is an excellent baker, and accomplished maker of all kinds of sweet things that I don’t have the skills or attention span to pull off. It’s tough in the sense that, for a very long time this wasn’t a recipe for handing out or, even more unthinkable, publishing. It was our secret house cookie—before it, we had been leaning heavily on the Korova cookie (from Pierre Hermé via Dorie Greenspan, which would later become perhaps better known as the World Peace Cookie), which is one of civilization’s great cookies—and this recipe became the one we’d only share if you got close enough. But the truth, evident in their appellation, is that they were someone else’s cookie before they were ours. That person is Jeanne Roth, our friend Genevieve’s mom. We ate them at her house in Anchorage on a summer day in 2007. My wife remembers falling for the cookies the moment she saw them on the cooling rack, and Jeanne was kind enough to share the recipe. I often have trouble finding clean socks, my checkbook, or my keys, but I know where that scrap of paper is at all times. They are, without question or hesitation, my ideal cookie. The oatmeal and coconut disappear; there is a melding, a unification, an alchemy where many ingredients become one greater thing. The nuts stay whole enough to add some textural intrigue, the chocolate—which we now hack into helter-skelter chunks instead of relying on the machine drip of chocolate chips—is sometimes a sliver or a splinter of joy, sometimes a pooled cocoa-colored lagoon of pleasure. I quite often eat one or more at each meal of the day—they are ideal companions to the first coffee of the day, a buffer between the quiet of dawn and the demands of the day to come. I eat so many, I feel like the moon man waxing toward maximum weight when they are in the house, and the only consolation from the sadness that accompanies their absence is that at least I am not eating cookies all day long. Until she makes them again. Reprinted with permission from Lucky Peach #13: The Holiday Issue, 2014.
  5. Absence is a state or condition in which something expected, wanted, or looked for is not present or does not exist. It can also mean the period of time that one is absent, the failure to be present at a usual or expected place, or inattention to present surroundings or occurrences. See synonyms, examples, etymology, and related phrases of absence.

  6. Learn the meaning and usage of the word absence, which can refer to the state of being away, the lack of something, or the failure to appear. Find synonyms, antonyms, related words, and idioms for absence on Dictionary.com.

  7. Find 89 words that mean absence, such as lack, need, deficiency, and adequacy, and their opposites, such as adequacy, supply, and sufficiency. Learn the definitions and usage of absence and its synonyms and antonyms with examples and related words.

  8. Learn the meaning and pronunciation of absence, a noun that refers to the fact of somebody or something not being present or available. Find out how to use absence in idioms, collocations and sentences with the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary.

  9. Absence is the state of not being someplace, like school. It can also refer to the amount of time something has been, or plans to be gone. We most commonly think of absence as the opposite of present in places school, but really it can refer to anything that's missing or something that's lacking.

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