Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • noun Plural form of condiment.

Etymologies

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Examples

  • He threw his leather jacket over a pidgeon he lured with a crust, snapped its neck, cleaned and plucked it, then (using condiments from the hotel fast food pavilion) made "lemon pepper squab" in the hotel room coffee maker pot!

    PA Police Target Pigeon Shoot 2009

  • He threw his leather jacket over a pidgeon he lured with a crust, snapped its neck, cleaned and plucked it, then (using condiments from the hotel fast food pavilion) made "lemon pepper squab" in the hotel room coffee maker pot!

    PA Police Target Pigeon Shoot 2009

  • As for the covering things in condiments - let your kids try this as well maybe they’ll eat more things.

    Dinner Time BLUES « Bored Mommy 2009

  • Via No More Mister Nice Blog (and latest addition to the blogroll), today's right-wing freak out is about President Obama's taste in condiments.

    What, No Onions? 2009

  • This of course is a rare quality to find in journalists these days you excepted of course Joanna! as the modern media man or woman is content to regurgitate the 'party line' dressed up in all sorts of buzz word condiments trying to make their tabloid more palatable than the opposition.

    And readers of this blog... Joanna Bogle 2009

  • Bernadette next taught Chloë how to jump down out of the van, open the window, pull down the ledge, put up the awning, and set out what Bernadette liked to call her condiments.

    T-Backs, T-shirts, Coat, and Suit E.L. Konigsborg 1993

  • Bernadette next taught Chloë how to jump down out of the van, open the window, pull down the ledge, put up the awning, and set out what Bernadette liked to call her condiments.

    T-Backs, T-shirts, Coat, and Suit E.L. Konigsborg 1993

  • The prevailing opinion respecting the substances known as condiments is, that they possess essentially stimulating qualities, rendering them peculiarly fitted for inducing, by reflex action, the secretion of the alimentary juices.

    Scientific American Supplement, No. 430, March 29, 1884 Various

  • They are called condiments, and as such may be used in moderation.

    A Practical Physiology Albert F. Blaisdell

  • A word about condiments: I wasn't wowed by the mild sambar, which substitutes pumpkin and a squashlike vegetable called "drumsticks" for carrots or potatoes.

    NYT > Home Page By DAVID M. HALBFINGER 2011

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