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Breadstuff   Listen
Breadstuff

noun
1.
Food made from dough of flour or meal and usually raised with yeast or baking powder and then baked.  Synonyms: bread, staff of life.
2.
Flour or meal or grain used in baking bread.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Breadstuff" Quotes from Famous Books



... time, a considerable accession to the settlements on Buchannon and Hacker's creek. So great was the increase of population in this latter neighborhood, that the crops of the preceding season did not afford more than one third of the breadstuff, which would be ordinarily consumed in the same time, by an equal number of persons. Such indeed was the state of suffering among the inhabitants, consequent on this scarcity, that the year 1773 is called in the traditionary ...
— Chronicles of Border Warfare • Alexander Scott Withers

... me, after we had ordered some breadstuff for the leading lady, "you're not such a late train with the sleight-of-hand ...
— You Can Search Me • Hugh McHugh

... buffaloes and the Indian fires, made it for days impossible to find any pasture except in small patches. When the fort was reached, they had fed their animals not only a large part of their grain, but some of their crackers and other breadstuff, and the beasts were so weak that they could ...
— The Story of the Mormons: • William Alexander Linn

... were as yet no roads worthy of the name to or from the settlement formed by himself and seven or eight neighbors at various distances. The village of Gentryville was not even begun. There was no sawmill to saw lumber. Breadstuff could be had only by sending young Abraham, on horseback, seven miles, with a bag of corn to be ground on a hand grist-mill. In the course of two or three years a road from Corydon to Evansville was laid out, running past the Lincoln farm; and perhaps two or three ...
— A Short Life of Abraham Lincoln - Condensed from Nicolay & Hay's Abraham Lincoln: A History • John G. Nicolay

... among the rice, unmindful of the gawking creatures that struggled and died among their feet. We made a singular picture: the hovering and diving birds; the bodies of the dead discolouring the rice with blood; the scuppers vomiting breadstuff; the men, frenzied by the gold hunt, toiling, slaying, and shouting aloud: over all, the lofty intricacy of rigging and the radiant heaven of the Pacific. Every man there toiled in the immediate hope of fifty dollars; and I, of fifty thousand. Small wonder if ...
— The Wrecker • Robert Louis Stevenson and Lloyd Osbourne



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