Synonyms for hodge-podge
Grammar : Noun |
Définition of hodge-podge
Origin :- see hodgepodge.
- noun miscellany
- It was a hodge-podge of parts of every old costume he had ever used.
- Extract from : « David Lannarck, Midget » by George S. Harney
- What a muddle, what a hodge-podge I have made of this pen work!
- Extract from : « Studies in the Art of Rat-catching » by H. C. Barkley
- When this hodge-podge was brewed it was offered to the soldiers.
- Extract from : « Ten years in the ranks, U.S. army » by Augustus Meyers
- Surely the Demoiselle could not hodge-podge herself into one of the whites?
- Extract from : « The Wanderer (Volume 2 of 5) » by Fanny Burney
- Is it the Theological hodge-podge, the farrago of all the religions, which believe in the Gospel?
- Extract from : « Two Addresses » by Nicholas Rigby
- He found its politics a hodge-podge of unsettled, bitter policies.
- Extract from : « Port O' Gold » by Louis John Stellman
- All that is required is to derive a certain starting-point from the hodge-podge of uncertainties and unintelligibility.
- Extract from : « Criminal Psychology » by Hans Gross
- Edwards has a library of goodly proportions, but it is a hodge-podge of everything under the sun.
- Extract from : « The Fiction Factory » by John Milton Edwards
- Another contemporary critic announces that “our English tongue was a gallimaufry or hodge-podge of all other speeches.”
- Extract from : « Amenities of Literature » by Isaac Disraeli
- For where the picture had been, there was now only a hodge-podge of wildly mixed colors!
- Extract from : « Dan Carter and the Great Carved Face » by Mildred A. Wirt
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Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019