fleshmeat
English
Alternative forms
- flesh-meat
Etymology
From Old English flǣscmete, equivalent to flesh + meat.
Noun
fleshmeat (countable and uncountable, plural fleshmeats)
- (dated) The flesh of animals (excluding fish or invertebrates) used or prepared for food.
- Synonym: meat
- a. 1529, John Skelton, Colyn Cloute, London: Richard Kele, c. 1545,
- some of you do eate / In lenton season fleshe mete
- 1671, Margaret Cavendish, “The She-Anchoret” in Natures Picture, London, Book 2, p. 574,
- […] Fish may be mix’d with Flesh-meat, although all Physicians are against it: for certainly, the natural freshness and coldness of Fish, doth temper and allay the natural heat and saltness that is in Flesh-meat,
- 1722, Daniel Defoe, A Journal of the Plague Year, London: E. Nutt et al., p. 92,
- […] I had no Flesh-meat, and the Plague raged so violently among the Butchers, and Slaughter-Houses […] that it was not advisable, so much as to go over the Street to them.
- 1848, Elizabeth Gaskell, Mary Barton, London: Chapman and Hall, Volume 1, Chapter 6, p. 98,
- […] it seemed hard to be spunging on Jem, and taking a’ his flesh-meat money to buy bread for me and them as I ought to be keeping.
- 1923, Arnold Bennett, Riceyman Steps, London: Cassell, Chapter 6, p. 115,
- “But how shall you cook it [the mutton]?”
- “Boil it, ’m. He never has flesh meat, not often that is, but when he does I boil it.”
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