Definitions
Sorry, no definitions found. You may find more data at rudkin.
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word Rudkin.
Examples
-
The case the Supreme Court heard is generally known as "Rudkin" since it involves a trust set up in 1967 in Connecticut under the will of Henry A. Rudkin, who, with his wife, founded food company Pepperidge Farm.
-
Supreme Court opinion in the case often referred to as "Rudkin" or "Knight"
-
Is it possible to create a Christmas XI? wonders Mark Rudkin.
-
Left, Leicester City academy coach John Rudkin patted the shoulder of an under-17 Indian player during a coaching session in Kolkata, March 2004.
-
As Griffiths points out, Westpac is happy to lend to cigar-chomping loony industrialists like Lane Walker Rudkin Industries, who took Westpac for NZ$110,000,000 (10,860,852,632.40 Nigerian Nairas) in bad loans.
Boing Boing 2009
-
Margaret Rudkin founded Pepperidge Farm named after her family farm in Fairfield, Connecticut in 1937, selling homemade bread and rolls.
More of America’s Most Wanted Recipes Ron Douglas 2010
-
Margaret Rudkin founded Pepperidge Farm named after her family farm in Fairfield, Connecticut in 1937, selling homemade bread and rolls.
More of America’s Most Wanted Recipes Ron Douglas 2010
-
By the 1950s, many consumers longed for a more authentic packaged bread, a niche soon filled by Pepperidge Farm, a company started by Margaret Rudkin, a Connecticut housewife.
One Big Table Molly O’Neill 2010
-
When Mrs. Rudkin, who wanted chemical-free bread for her allergic son, used quality ingredients to produce thinly sliced bread, the desire for tea sandwich elegance and the trend toward dieting were joined.
One Big Table Molly O’Neill 2010
-
Branching out, Rudkin licensed the rights to related products, bought a pastry company and acquired a fish-shaped cracker company she called Goldfish.
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.