Meat-pie

  • 21Meat analogue — Hong Kong style tofu from Buddhist cuisine is prepared to have a texture similar to meat …

    Wikipedia

  • 22meat — /mi:t/ noun 1 (U) the flesh of animals and birds eaten as food: I gave up eating meat a few months ago. | meat pie 2 (C) a type of meat: a selection of cold meats 3 (U) something that is interesting or important in a talk, book etc: The lecture… …

    Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • 23pie — n 1. tart, turnover, U.S. pandowdy, French Cookery. quiche, pastry, Fr. patisserie; cream pie, fruit pie, meat pie, Boston cream pie. 2. pie in the sky illusions, false hopes, delusions, unrealistic aspirations or goals; self deceit, self… …

    A Note on the Style of the synonym finder

  • 24pie floater — noun A meat pie served floating in a bowl of thick green pea soup …

    Wiktionary

  • 25Pie floater — a meat pie floating in pea soup (mash), usually with lots of sauce (traditional Aussie tucker) …

    Dictionary of Australian slang

  • 26pie floater — Australian Slang a meat pie floating in pea soup (mash), usually with lots of sauce (traditional Aussie tucker) …

    English dialects glossary

  • 27Pie and peas — is a traditional meal in the north of England, consisting of an individual raised pork pie made with hot water crust pastry and served with mushy peas and mint sauce. The pies are normally bought rather than home made. Pie and pea shops and… …

    Wikipedia

  • 28pie — [ paı ] noun count or uncount * a food that consists of meat, vegetables, or fruit cooked inside a case of PASTRY or below a layer of it: apple/cherry/pumpkin pie a piece/slice of pie a. a mixture of vegetables, meat, or fish that is cooked with… …

    Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • 29meat — (n.) O.E. mete food, item of food (paired with drink), from P.Gmc. *mati (Cf. O.Fris. mete, O.S. meti, O.N. matr, O.H.G. maz, Goth. mats food, M.Du., Du. metworst, Ger. Mettwurst type of sausage ), from PIE *mad i …

    Etymology dictionary

  • 30pie — S2 [paı] n [U and C] ↑filling, ↑pastry [Date: 1300 1400; Origin: Perhaps from pie magpie ( MAGPIE); because the different things in a pie are like the different things a magpie collects] 1.) fruit baked inside a ↑pastry covering slice/piece of… …

    Dictionary of contemporary English