Definify.com
Webster 1828 Edition
Ketchup
KETCH'UP
,Definition 2024
Ketchup
Ketchup
German
Alternative forms
- Ketschup
Noun
Ketchup m, n (genitive Ketchup or Ketchups, plural Ketchups)
Derived terms
ketchup
ketchup
English
Alternative forms
Noun
ketchup (countable and uncountable, plural ketchups)
- (uncountable) A tomato-vinegar-based sauce.
- (US standard of identity) A food comprising tomato concentrate and any of vinegar, sweetener, spices, flavoring, onion, and garlic.
- (countable) Such a sauce more generally (not necessarily based on tomatoes).
- fish ketchup; fruit ketchup; mushroom ketchup
Translations
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Usage notes
The term is now used almost exclusively to refer to tomato ketchup. However, at one time it was a more general term for sauce, and it is still occasionally used in this way, as with grape ketchup and mushroom ketchup.
The spelling ketchup became significantly preferred in the United States due to the popularity of the Heinz brand, which shortly after its introduction in 1876 switched from catsup to this spelling to distinguish itself from competitors. Other major brands, such as Hunt, subsequently followed, with Del Monte only switching to ketchup in 1988.[2]
This condiment is more commonly and somewhat ambiguously called tomato sauce outside of the Americas. In South Africa, the word ketchup is not generally understood.
Verb
ketchup (third-person singular simple present ketchups, present participle ketchupping, simple past and past participle ketchupped)
- (transitive) To cover with ketchup.
- 1867, John Maddison Morton, Aunt Charlotte's maid: a farce in one act
- It strikes me she's "ketchupped" the lot! I won't touch a morsel!
- 1973, Horizon (page 15)
- "Well," said Chuck, ketchupping his hamburger, "I'd rather do without King Lear than put up with the human agony it sprang out of. I'd rather not have the Eroica than have the big bloody conqueror it tries to immortalize."
- 2009, David Silverman, Twinkle (page 4)
- Their fellow diners, like their ketchupped grub, were appropriately dashed and splattered with paint and plaster, reading their Suns and Daily Mirror.
- 1867, John Maddison Morton, Aunt Charlotte's maid: a farce in one act
References
- ↑ “The etymological origin of the word ketchup is a matter of confusion.” Pure Ketchup, by Andrew F. Smith, ISBN 1-56098-993-9. Page 4.
- ↑ “Is There a Difference Between Ketchup and Catsup?”, Slate, Aisha Harris, April 22, 2013
- “ketchup” in Douglas Harper, Online Etymology Dictionary (2001).
Dutch
Pronunciation
Etymology
Borrowing from English ketchup.
Noun
ketchup m (plural ketchups, diminutive ketchupje n)
Synonyms
Derived terms
French
Etymology
Borrowing from English ketchup.
Pronunciation
- (France) IPA(key): /kɛt.ʃœp/
- (Quebec) IPA(key): /kɛt.ʃɔp/
Noun
ketchup m (plural ketchups)
Polish
Alternative forms
Etymology
Borrowing from English ketchup.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈkɛt͡ʂup/, rare: /ˈkɛt͡ʂap/
Noun
ketchup m inan
Declension
Portuguese
Noun
ketchup m (plural ketchups)
- Alternative spelling of catchup
Quotations
For usage examples of this term, see Citations:ketchup.