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Drippings   Listen
Drippings

noun
1.
Fat that exudes from meat and drips off while it is being roasted or fried.



Dripping

noun
1.
A liquid (as water) that flows in drops (as from the eaves of house).  Synonym: drippage.
2.
The sound of a liquid falling drop by drop.  Synonym: drip.



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"Drippings" Quotes from Famous Books



... and burned. This left the entire surface of the four hundred acres smooth and fit for the plough. The soil was the deposit of centuries, and the inclination, from the woods to the stream, was scarcely perceptible to the eye. In fact, it was barely sufficient to drain the drippings of the winter's snows. The form of the area was a little irregular; just enough so to be picturesque; while the inequalities were surprisingly few and trifling. In a word, nature had formed just such a spot as delights the husbandman's heart, and placed ...
— Wyandotte • James Fenimore Cooper

... packet reluctant and inhospitable. By the harbour-entrance, a petulant squall of rain beat upon them as though to shoo them away. The landing-stage was slippery and slimy with rain, soot, and petrol drippings from the motor-cars shipped to and fro. Customs-house officers eyed them with tired suspicion; porters took their money and hastened away with the curtest of acknowledgments; an engine panted sullenly as it waited for never-ending mail-bags to be hauled ...
— Swirling Waters • Max Rittenberg

... might shudder at the idea of taking away the life of a fellow-being, might soon have his conscience so seared by the repetition of crime, that the agonies of his murdered victims might become music to his soul, and the drippings of the scaffold afford blood to swim in. History is ...
— The Anti-Slavery Examiner, Omnibus • American Anti-Slavery Society

... 'window-curtains.'] Everything being in readiness, a number of the most beautiful of the king's women entered, bearing water in round vessels called Xicales, for the king to wash his hands in, and towels that he might dry them, other vessels being placed upon the ground to catch the drippings. Two other women at the same time brought him some small loaves of a very delicate kind of bread, made of the finest maize flour, beaten up with eggs. This done, a wooden screen, carved and gilt, was placed before him that no one might see him while eating. There ...
— Houses and House-Life of the American Aborigines • Lewis H. Morgan

... reply. The subject stood in abeyance while she feasted and took thought. Presently her attention rested upon the griddle. On it there was a diminutive pancake which had made itself from the drippings ...
— The Wrong Woman • Charles D. Stewart


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