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pudding

[ UK /pˈʊdɪŋ/ ]
[ US /ˈpʊdɪŋ/ ]
NOUN
  1. any of various soft sweet desserts thickened usually with flour and baked or boiled or steamed
  2. any of various soft thick unsweetened baked dishes
    corn pudding
  3. (British) the dessert course of a meal (`pud' is used informally)

How To Use pudding In A Sentence

  • Mmm, that pudding was lovely.
  • Spoon the mixture into a pudding basin and chill for at least two hours.
  • That includes the ever-popular plum cake, plum pudding and Yule log, marzipans glittering with a coat of sugar, and delightful creations such as nougat, truffle and gateaux.
  • The hard labor of the farm was mostly done by them, and on the floor of the big kitchen, toward sundown, would be squatting a circle of twelve or fourteen "pickaninnies," eating their supper of pudding (Indian corn mush) and milk. November Boughs ; from Complete Poetry and Collected Prose
  • There was great cheese, baked rice with damson jam and nutmeg and golden syrup pudding.
  • There's traditional plum pudding or apple pie for tonight's dessert.
  • To start I had the salad of black pudding with red onion marmalade and bacon lardons at £6.69.
  • There is a display cabinet with wrapped sandwiches, salads (mackerel or ham) and cold puddings.
  • Hast thou no great bag-pudding, nor hog's-face that is called souse? A Select Collection of Old English Plays, Volume 6
  • Don't be fooled by English English," advised Columbia: "the accent is like a mouthful of pudding, and when they mean to say the weather is bad they say it is 'nawsty;' they call their rubbers 'galoshes,' their dépôts 'stations,' and when they start on a journey they get their Lippincott's Magazine, November 1885
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