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My father has been very ill, and I will have to make Thanksgiving dinner at his home. Therefore, I decided to buy mostly pre-made food for Thanksgiving this year. I went to the grocery store and asked for "dressing." While I am going to roast the turkey myself, I didn't want to fiddle with making the dressing. The clerk looked at me as though I were crazy. Then he asked if I meant "gravy." "No," I said, "I mean dressing." He asked if I meant broth. "No, I mean dressing." Well, after thinking they must not have it, I said, "You know, stuffing." He said, "Ahhh...stuffing! Yes, we have that." Is "dressing" a regional word? The clerk happened to be Hispanic. | ||
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I learned it as dressing, since that's what my folks called it. I do hear stuffing used more often these days. Here's a definition from the OED Online:
From Wikipedia:
Now, that's strange. My mother was from Louisiana and she always called it dressing, if I remember right, though it was always stuffed in a turkey. Then we took it out and stuffed it in us little turkeys (Pre-emptive strike, Asa). Tinman | |||
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In the UK, dressing is for salads; stuffing is for geese and turkeys. Richard English | |||
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Why did the stuffing hide behind the turkey? Because it was dressing! ******* "Happiness is not something ready made. It comes from your own actions. ~Dalai Lama | |||
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Funny, CW! Happy Thanksgiving all you Americans! | |||
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<Asa Lovejoy> |
Presupposing UNdressing before stuffing, I assume. | ||
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Oh, Asa, you're so darn conventional! Sometimes it's fun to stuff while dressed! Thanks, Kalleh - same to you! ******* "Happiness is not something ready made. It comes from your own actions. ~Dalai Lama | |||
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