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Potato   /pətˈeɪtˌoʊ/   Listen
Potato

noun
(pl. potatoes)
1.
An edible tuber native to South America; a staple food of Ireland.  Synonyms: Irish potato, murphy, spud, tater, white potato.
2.
Annual native to South America having underground stolons bearing edible starchy tubers; widely cultivated as a garden vegetable; vines are poisonous.  Synonyms: Solanum tuberosum, white potato, white potato vine.



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"Potato" Quotes from Famous Books



... successively, all is well, and the whole three hundred fancy themselves sure of a dinner; but if any suspicion of a hoax should arise, and they were all to rush into the room at once, there would be two hundred without a potato for their money; and the table would be occupied by the landholders, who live ...
— Specimens of the Table Talk of S.T.Coleridge • Coleridge

... they saw it first from this height. The picture was made at the edge of the water with the Carlow Stone in the foreground, and over the mountains on the southern shore appears a sky that would make the dullest potato-field thrilling. ...
— Yorkshire Painted And Described • Gordon Home

... was so jolly anxious for me to stay to lunch was because meals without dear old me or some other chatty intellectual were about as much like a feast of reason and a flow of soul as a vinegar bottle and a lukewarm potato on a cold plate. Similarly with the exuberance of his greeting of me. I hate to confess it, but it wasn't so much splendid old me he had been so delighted to see as any old body to whom he could unloose his tongue without having the end of ...
— If Winter Comes • A.S.M. Hutchinson

... in the Roots and boil them, and shake them, and when they be enough, take them off, and shake them till they are cold and dry, then lay them upon Dishes or Plates till they are throughly dry, and then put them up; thus you may do Orange or Limon, or Citron Pill, or Potato Roots. ...
— The Queen-like Closet or Rich Cabinet • Hannah Wolley

... pot—desired and beloved of every colonist—sometimes weighed forty pounds, and lasted in daily use for many years. All the vegetables were boiled together in these great pots, unless some very particular housewife had a wrought-iron potato-boiler to hold potatoes or any single vegetable in place ...
— Home Life in Colonial Days • Alice Morse Earle


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