Salmagundis [noun]
Definition of Salmagundis:
miscellany
Synonyms of Salmagundis:
Sentence/Example of Salmagundis:
I'm glad I didn't, though a lot of the Salmagundi men go over there and like it.
This is very simple jesting, but at that time it was very effective in a town that enjoyed the high spirits of Salmagundi.
He became a friend of W. Irving, and was part author with him of Salmagundi—a continuation of which by himself proved a failure.
They had caviare now, and salmagundi, and sausage and cheese, besides salad and fruit and biscuit and cake.
In 1820 Salmagundi says that "one of the editors of the Port Folio was discharged—for writing common-sense."
Washington Irving's first literary adventure was the publication of Salmagundi.
I called it the Salmagundi, which means anything made out of spare parts.
A feeling crept over me, one not unlike the feeling I'd had when I realized that they'd turned poor old Salmagundi into a traitor.
They had caviar now, and salmagundi, and sausage and cheese, besides salad and fruit and biscuit and cake.
This Aunt Sarah made frequently, being a frugal housewife, and called "Salmagundi."