Dictionary
Thesaurus
Encyclopedia
Translator
Web

puddinglike

 - 2 dictionary results

pud⋅ding

[pood-ing]
–noun
1. a thick, soft dessert, typically containing flour or some other thickener, milk, eggs, a flavoring, and sweetener: tapioca pudding.
2. a similar dish unsweetened and served with or as a main dish: corn pudding.
3. British. the dessert course of a meal.
4. Nautical. a pad or fender for preventing scraping or chafing or for lessening shock between vessels or other objects.

Origin:
1275–1325; ME poding kind of sausage; cf. OE puduc wen, sore (perh. orig. swelling), LG puddewurst black pudding


pud⋅ding⋅like, adjective
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
Cite This Source Link To puddinglike
Word Origin & History

pudding 
c.1305, "a kind of sausage: the stomach or one of the entrails of a pig, sheep, etc., stuffed with minced meat, suet, seasoning, boiled and kept till needed," perhaps from a W.Gmc. stem *pud- "to swell" (cf. O.E. puduc "a wen," Westphalian dial. puddek "lump, pudding," Low Ger. pudde-wurst "black pudding," Eng. dial. pod "belly," also cf. pudgy). Other possibility is that it is from O.Fr. boudin "sausage," from V.L. *botellinus, from L. botellus "sausage" (change of Fr. b- to Eng. p- presents difficulties, but cf. purse). The modern sense had emerged by 1670, from extension to other foods boiled or steamed in a bag or sack. Ger. pudding, Fr. pouding, Swed. pudding, Ir. putog are from Eng. Puddinghead "amiable stupid person" is attested from 1851.
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2001 Douglas Harper
Cite This Source
Search another word or see puddinglike on Thesaurus | Reference
FacebookTwitterFollow us: