English
Adjective
Heinz 57 (not comparable)
- (of a thing) A complete mix; containing parts of many different origins.
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1994, Bruce Palmer, How to Restore Your Harley-Davidson, ISBN 0879389346, page 13:- Is the stock 1939 Harley-Davidson you are looking at 100% 1939 or is it 50% 1939 and 50% Heinz 57, or does it only have a motor with 1939 crankcases sitting in a 1972 chassis?
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2003, Jeffery Zeldman, Designing with Web Standards, ISBN 0735712018, page 78:- Then, too, designers and developers who’ve taken the time to learn the Heinz 57 varieties of proprietary scripting and authoring might see little reason to learn anything new…
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2006, Richard S. Kitchen, Mathematics Education at Highly Effective Schools that Serve the Poor, ISBN 0805856889, page 84:- [quoting a teacher at a middle school] So the 7th grade math one [curriculum], is like Heinz 57, it's from everywhere and anywhere
- (of a person or animal, chiefly a dog, informal) Having ancestry of many different origins; to be of mixed race or breed
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1995, Erika Bourguignon, “Identity and the Constant Self”, in The Psychoanalytic Study of Society, volume 19, page 183:- “[...] My mother is a bit more on the Heinz 57 side. She's got a strong Germanic background, a little bit of British, and my maternal grandmother is French-Canadian.”
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1997, Richard Rhodes, Farm: A Year in the Life of an American Farmer, ISBN 0803289650, page 282:- There just wasn’t any place on the farm for four more Heinz 57 dogs running around.
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1997, Richard Dyer, White, ISBN 0415095360, page 9:- As one woman (Cathy Thomas) vividly and wittily put it, ‘To be a Heinz 57 American, a white, class-confused American, land of the Kleenex type American, is so formless in and of itself’
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