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 | Mar 15, 2010This week's theme Words about food and eating This week's words salmagundi edacious olla podrida prandial gallimaufry Discuss this week's words on our bulletin board: Wordsmith Talk  Discuss  Feedback  RSS/XML             A.Word.A.Daywith Anu Garg There are times when we have to eat our words, and that's never pleasant. This week's words are all edible (and some potable), from Latin edere: to eat (and potare: to drink). Some describe food, others are used metaphorically, and in some cases, the food origin is hidden in the etymology. And we have quite a varied menu. We serve words from French, Spanish, and Latin. Bon appétit! salmagundi
 PRONUNCIATION:(sal-muh-GUHN-dee)   
 MEANING:noun: 1. A heterogeneous mixture. 2. A mixed salad of various ingredients, such as meat, eggs, anchovies, onions, oil, vinegar, etc. ETYMOLOGY:From French salmigondis (originally "seasoned salted meats"), probably from
salemine (salted food) + condir (to season). USAGE:"After a few years of musical production, the varied musical whims that
   have inspired their salmagundi of tracks is happily all over the place." One-man Band Bounces Back To Originality; Gainesville Sun (Florida); Jul 1, 2007. See more usage examples of salmagundi in Vocabulary.com's dictionary. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:All visible objects, man, are but as pasteboard masks. But in each event -- in the living act, the undoubted deed -- there, some unknown but still reasoning thing puts forth the mouldings of its features from behind the unreasoning mask. -Herman Melville, novelist and poet (1819-1891) | 
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