leftover
leftover — adjective
1. describing something that is still there after the rest of it has been eaten, co
describing something that is still there after the rest of it has been eaten, consumed, or taken for other purposes.
The chef turned the leftover vegetables into a warm soup for the staff.
attributive use: leftover + food noun
I kept the leftover paint in a sealed jar in case the wall needs touch-ups.
There were several leftover bricks after the gardener finished building the wall.
The family ate leftover pizza for breakfast the morning after the party.
文法句型
leftover + noun
用法筆記
Always placed directly before a noun — for example, 'leftover vegetables' or 'leftover fabric.' Cannot be used in comparative form (no 'more leftover'). In a sentence like 'There is some food left over,' the two-word form 'left over' functions as a predicate phrase after the noun, not as an attributive adjective before it.
常見錯誤
leftover — noun
1. food, materials, or other items that have not been fully used up, especially aft
food, materials, or other items that have not been fully used up, especially after a meal or a task is finished.
Our grandmother always turns the leftovers into a completely new dish the next day.
plural form 'leftovers' for food
The tailor saved the leftover from the dress project to make matching accessories.
singular form for non-food materials
There were enough leftovers from the dinner party to feed the neighbour's whole family.
My sister used the leftover from the wallpaper job to cover an old notebook.
- fresh food
food that has not been cooked or left over
- main portion
the part that was consumed, not the remainder
文法句型
leftovers from + noun phrase
the + leftover + of + noun phrase
用法筆記
Most commonly used in plural form 'leftovers' when referring to food. In singular form, 'leftover' often refers to a remaining amount of a non-food material (e.g., 'a leftover from the project'). Can be paired with 'from' to indicate the original source: 'leftovers from dinner' or 'a leftover from the renovation.'