See dead cake on Wiktionary
{ "forms": [ { "form": "dead cakes", "tags": [ "plural" ] } ], "head_templates": [ { "args": {}, "expansion": "dead cake (plural dead cakes)", "name": "en-noun" } ], "lang": "English", "lang_code": "en", "pos": "noun", "senses": [ { "alt_of": [ { "word": "deadcake" } ], "categories": [ { "kind": "other", "name": "English entries with incorrect language header", "parents": [ "Entries with incorrect language header", "Entry maintenance" ], "source": "w" }, { "kind": "other", "name": "Pages with 1 entry", "parents": [], "source": "w" }, { "kind": "other", "name": "Pages with entries", "parents": [], "source": "w" } ], "examples": [ { "ref": "1883, Jonathan Pearson, Junius Wilson MacMurray, A history of the Schenectady patent in the Dutch and English times:", "text": "When any one was dead the friends would commence to make preparation for the funeral; in the first place after the corpse was laid out they would send for 35 or 50 gallons of Cherry wine, and some 15 or 22 gallons of it was taken and a compound of spices was put in it and made hot, and the rest was used cold; also two or three bushels of small sugar cake was made which was called Dote Kooken or dead cake, also three to five pounds of tobacco and from two to three hundred pipes ; then a table was set through the house in every room, on those tables is plates of cake, plates of tobacco and at each side of the plates of tobacco is a number of pipes and a roll of paper done up to light the tobacco; also candles lit, also wine put up in bottles and set on the table, and wine glasses; the spice wine was put in silver tankers and sat on the tables.", "type": "quote" }, { "ref": "1897, Mary Gay Humphreys, Catherine Schuyler, page 78:", "text": "Sanders Lansing was celebrated for her \"dead cakes,\" bearing the monogram of the dead.", "type": "quote" }, { "ref": "2008, Kenneth L. Untiedt, Death Lore: Texas Rituals, Superstitions, and Legends of the Hereafter:", "text": "For some Pennsylvanian Germans, wine and “dead cakes” were delivered when making such invitations; the cakes, which looked like large cookies and often had the deceased's initials scratched in them, “were not eaten but kept as a memento of the person who had died.", "type": "quote" } ], "glosses": [ "Alternative form of deadcake" ], "id": "en-dead_cake-en-noun-ryq9MlbV", "links": [ [ "deadcake", "deadcake#English" ] ], "tags": [ "alt-of", "alternative" ] } ], "word": "dead cake" }
{ "forms": [ { "form": "dead cakes", "tags": [ "plural" ] } ], "head_templates": [ { "args": {}, "expansion": "dead cake (plural dead cakes)", "name": "en-noun" } ], "lang": "English", "lang_code": "en", "pos": "noun", "senses": [ { "alt_of": [ { "word": "deadcake" } ], "categories": [ "English countable nouns", "English entries with incorrect language header", "English lemmas", "English multiword terms", "English nouns", "English terms with quotations", "Pages with 1 entry", "Pages with entries" ], "examples": [ { "ref": "1883, Jonathan Pearson, Junius Wilson MacMurray, A history of the Schenectady patent in the Dutch and English times:", "text": "When any one was dead the friends would commence to make preparation for the funeral; in the first place after the corpse was laid out they would send for 35 or 50 gallons of Cherry wine, and some 15 or 22 gallons of it was taken and a compound of spices was put in it and made hot, and the rest was used cold; also two or three bushels of small sugar cake was made which was called Dote Kooken or dead cake, also three to five pounds of tobacco and from two to three hundred pipes ; then a table was set through the house in every room, on those tables is plates of cake, plates of tobacco and at each side of the plates of tobacco is a number of pipes and a roll of paper done up to light the tobacco; also candles lit, also wine put up in bottles and set on the table, and wine glasses; the spice wine was put in silver tankers and sat on the tables.", "type": "quote" }, { "ref": "1897, Mary Gay Humphreys, Catherine Schuyler, page 78:", "text": "Sanders Lansing was celebrated for her \"dead cakes,\" bearing the monogram of the dead.", "type": "quote" }, { "ref": "2008, Kenneth L. Untiedt, Death Lore: Texas Rituals, Superstitions, and Legends of the Hereafter:", "text": "For some Pennsylvanian Germans, wine and “dead cakes” were delivered when making such invitations; the cakes, which looked like large cookies and often had the deceased's initials scratched in them, “were not eaten but kept as a memento of the person who had died.", "type": "quote" } ], "glosses": [ "Alternative form of deadcake" ], "links": [ [ "deadcake", "deadcake#English" ] ], "tags": [ "alt-of", "alternative" ] } ], "word": "dead cake" }
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This page is a part of the kaikki.org machine-readable All languages combined dictionary. This dictionary is based on structured data extracted on 2024-11-06 from the enwiktionary dump dated 2024-10-02 using wiktextract (fbeafe8 and 7f03c9b). The data shown on this site has been post-processed and various details (e.g., extra categories) removed, some information disambiguated, and additional data merged from other sources. See the raw data download page for the unprocessed wiktextract data.
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