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"souse" Definitions
  1. souse something/somebody to soak something/somebody completely in a liquid

42 Sentences With "souse"

How to use souse in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "souse" and check conjugation/comparative form for "souse". Mastering all the usages of "souse" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Put them in a grilled cheese sandwich, you goddamn souse.
But still—a ceiling fan, a sill, & a souse who hung On my every world.
The briny taste of her souse, pickled pigs' feet served in an acidic brine, recalled the salty waves.
The seeming mismatch of Mr. Krapp (surely we can allow the old souse the dignity of the rare honorific) and Mr. Wilson offers intriguing glimpses into the characters of both.
They described their oppression, how the life was squeezed out of them [peze-souse]. They described how everything was being destroyed [kraze-brize].
Arts and crafts are performed, along with a greasy pole climbing competition. The food and drinks served include fish, seafood, beer, fish cakes, pudding, and souse.
Epicurian Tourist. 25 December 2007. Retrieved 21 January 2011. Another traditional meal is pudding and souse, a dish of pickled pork with spiced sweet potatoes..www.barbados.org.
The term "head cheese" is used in North America, "potted heid" in Scotland, "brawn" elsewhere in Britain and Australia. The term "souse" for the pickled variety is North American and West Indian.
The Good Luck of a "Souse" was sold by Méliès's Star Film Company and is numbered 1044–1049 in its catalogues. A fragment of the film survives; the rest is presumed lost.
Many other verses and variations have been added in different parts of the world. A common second verse in the 20th century: :: And the Souse family is the best family :: That ever came over from Old Germany. :: There's the Highland Dutch, the Lowland Dutch; :: The Rotterdam Dutch and all the other damn Dutch.
The Good Luck of a "Souse" () was a 1907 French short silent film by Georges Méliès. The film, of which only a fragment is known to survive, centered on an drunkard whose family is saved from violence, and who finally is able to give up his alcoholism, thanks to a series of happy accidents.
Bahamians enjoy many soups popular throughout the Caribbean including conch chowder or stewed conch, stewed fish and split pea soup (made with ham). Peas are used in various soups, including a soup made with dumplings and salt beef. Souse is a soup usually made with chicken, lime, potatoes and pepper., if made with fish it is called boiled fish.
Such a Triplet could you tell Where to find on this Side Hell? > Harrison, and Dilkes, and Clements, Souse them in their own Excrèments. > Every Mischief's in their Hearts, If they fail 'tis Want of Parts. He was promoted to major in the 14th Dragoons on 14 January 1738, but had left the regiment by 1742.
It is sold by local producers as a popular accompaniment to rolls of crusty hops bread or served as an accompaniment to trotter souse, a stew based on trotters.Dave DeWitt & Mary Jane Wilson: Callaloo, Calypso & Carnival, p.62. The Crossing Press 1993 Other varieties of blood sausage include boudin rouge (Creole and Cajun), rellena or moronga (Mexico) and sanganel (Friuli).
Totally Barbados. Retrieved 25 January 2011. Other very popular dishes include fried fish cakes, fish & chips, souse (a pickled pork dish), black pudding, macaroni pie, and sweet desserts such as tamarind balls and baked custard. Food sold by street vendors is popular on the island, and key locations include Baxter's Road near Bridgetown, and Oistins, with its Friday Night Fish Fry.
Scrapple is a pudding formed of pork scraps and cornmeal, served sliced and fried. Liver pudding is made out of pig liver and head parts, mostly leftovers from the animal. Head cheese is parts of the head of a pig or calf that are made into a gelatin and mixed with vegetables. A variant is souse, made from pig's feet and pickled with vinegar.
Clay Time, The Journal of Ceramic Trends & Techniques, Tony Meriono, "Art out of Frugality" 1998. His mother made soap, hominy and souse in the large black cast-iron pots. Watkins creates large double-walled ceramics forms that are inspired by the memory of helping his mother keep the fire burning hot around the cast-iron pots.The Studio Potter (cover), James Watkins, "Reflection on Legacy", Winter/Spring Issue 2014.
Blood sausage and souse is a Bajan delicacy usually prepared on weekends and special occasions. In the French Antilles, boudin créole is very popular, this being the French boudin noir with local Caribbean chilli and other spices. In Guyana, blood sausage is a very popular snack served at social occasions, and as "cutters" when drinking. The main ingredient is cooked rice seasoned with herbs, such as thyme and basil.
Harry joked that "we" need better lyrics, a play on words since Ron's telephone call went badly and so had Harry's brief performance Shortly, Harry and I were on our third or fourth beer and Ron was finishing his second pitcher. We were kicking about lyrics dealing with Mary and Ron. The one line I distinctly remember was 'I'm a young old sodden souse'. I did not realize who Harry would become.
When that raft > hit those rapids at "Rooster Tail" we were going round and round, dived into > "Souse Hole", slammed into rocks here and more rocks there. Seemed like the > harder you paddled the more rocks you'd hit. You'd just whirl and twirl and > wham into more big boulders you hadn't even seen. Sometimes that white-faced > water would stand straight up and slam you smack-kadab all over the raft, or > out of it.
A total of 3.3 million deaths (5.9% of all deaths) are believed to be due to alcohol. Alcoholism reduces a person's life expectancy by approximately ten years. Many terms, some insulting and others informal, have been used to refer to people affected by alcoholism; the expressions include tippler, drunkard, dipsomaniac and souse. In 1979, the World Health Organization discouraged the use of "alcoholism" due to its inexact meaning, preferring "alcohol dependence syndrome".
The Bank Dick, released as The Bank Detective in the United Kingdom, is a 1940 comedy film starring W.C. Fields. Set in Lompoc, California, Fields plays Egbert Sousé who accidentally thwarts a bank robbery and ends up a bank security guard as a result. The character is a drunk who must repeatedly remind people in exasperation that his name is pronounced "Sousé—accent grave over the 'e'!", because people keep calling him "Souse", slang for drunkard.
It is called in Louisiana French; fromage de cochon. In Mississippi, Alabama, and other Southern states, it is encountered in a spicy form known as souse or less spicy hog's head cheese. Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada: Throughout Newfoundland, brawn is typically made from wild game such as moose and caribou. Ontario, Canada: Commercial, processed versions made with pork are sold in the deli section in some grocery stores in Ontario, such as in the German 'heimat' of Waterloo Region.
German Sülze Head cheese or brawn is a cold cut that is a terrine or meat jelly often made with flesh from the head of a calf or pig, or less commonly a sheep or cow, and often set in aspic that originated in Europe; it is not a dairy cheese. A version pickled with vinegar is known as souse. The parts of the head used vary, but the brain, eyes, and ears are usually removed. The tongue, and sometimes the feet and heart, may be included.
Head cheese is very popular and is usually referred to as queso de cabeza in Chile and Colombia. In Peru, Ecuador, Bolivia, and Costa Rica, it is also known as queso de chancho. It is known as queso de Cerdo in Uruguay and Argentina. In Panama, it is known as sous (from Caribbean English souse), made with pig's feet and prepared the same way as in the Caribbean; it is a dish from the Caribbean coast, where most of Panama's West Indian community lives.
Cricket is popular in Güiria. Steelpan music from Trinidad and Tobago can be heard in Güiria's carnival, as a cultural influence from the nearby islands. Güiria has some typical dishes not found in usual Venezuelan cuisine, such as kalalu(callaloo), sauz (souse), pelau and domplina. On 11 March 2012, Güiria was the landing point of the Atlantic Ocean crossing by Turkish American adventurer Erden Eruç in his Guinness world record setting solo human-powered circumnavigation of the earth, after rowing from Lüderitz, Namibia in about five months.
In Antigua, rice pudding is a local delicacy and it is prepared the same way as blood sausage. In Barbados, blood sausage is made with sweet potato (batata), pig's blood and onions, seasoned with peppers and other herbs and stuffed in pig intestines. It is normally served with souse, which is pickled pig's feet, pig's ears and other trimmings. The cooked meat is cut into bite-sized pieces and soaked in a brine made of water, lime juice, cucumbers, hot pepper, and specially prepared seasonings.
Eel stew. Souse (a broth made with pork and often served with grated cucumber salad), fried bake and floats, Accra (a fried dough which contains salt fish), Paime (otherwise known as Conkies) and a famous dish known as Bouillon (a lentils/ red beans and pumpkin soup with pork or beef, green plantains,dumplings, spinach and chopped carrots. Also local drinks such as Cocoa Tea, breadfruit punch, Seamoss punch, Spice drink made by mixing local spices and various barks from medicinal plants with rum. Golden Apple Juice, Guava Juice,sour orange juice and more.
Alberta, Canada: the typical jellied meat available in stores is labelled "head cheese", whether or not it is actually made from the head. The large Eastern European community in the province also has a (declining) tradition of making jellied meat at home, usually from pigs' feet, and this is called studenetz in the local dialect of the Ukrainian language. Pennsylvania, United States: In the Pennsylvania Dutch dialect, head cheese is called souse. Pennsylvania Germans usually prepare it from the meat of pig's feet or tongue and it is pickled with sausage.
Korea's newest policies regarding foreign marriage includes stipulations that a visa will only be issued if the income of a sponsor meets the income requirement by the Minister of Justice. In addition, the foreigner is required to have a Korean language capability to properly communicate with their Korean souse. A sponsor must have a residential space where a marriage migrant can reside upon entering Korea. The space must be owned or rented under the name of the sponsor or a member of his/her immediate family living with him/her represented on the resident registration.
"One More Drink" appeared in the song anthology Immortalia, published in 1927.Immortalia: An Anthology of American Ballads, Sailors' Songs, Cowboy Songs, College Songs, Parodies, Limericks, and other humorous verses and doggerel was published in 1927 and republished four times in later decades. The song was sung on college campuses and across the United States throughout the 20th century. The chorus has been included as part of many other drinking songs, such as "There Are No Airborne Rangers", "Glorious" (1950s college song), "The Souse Family", and "The California Drinking Song".
Tyne-side seem'd clad wiv bonny ha's, An' furnaces sae dunny; Wey this mun be what Bible ca's "The land ov milk and honey!" If a' thor things belang'd tiv me, Aw'd myek the poor reet murry, An' gar each heart to sing wiv glee, Iv Jemmy Joneson's whurry. Then on we went, as nice as ourse, Till nenst au'd Lizzy Moody's; A whirlwind cam an' myed a' souse, Like heaps o' babby boodies. The heykin myed me vurry wauf, Me heed turn'd duzzy, vurry; Me leuks, aw'm shure, wad spyen'd a cauf, Iv Jemmy Joneson's whurry.
Souse is pickled meat and trimmings usually made from pig's feet, chicken feet or cow's tongue, to name a few.Sinful alterations ruin boxed chocolates [Ontario Edition] March 27, 2002 page D.04 Toronto Star The cooked meat or trimmings are cut into bite-sized pieces and soaked in a brine made of water, lime juice, cucumbers, hot pepper, salt and specially prepared seasonings. It is usually eaten on Saturday mornings, especially in St. Vincent and Barbados. In Trinidad and Tobago, it is served or sold at most social gatherings, such as parties, all- inclusive fetes and sporting competitions.
During Carnival, souse, a type of soup made very spicy with pigs feet, knuckles, and tails with many onions, is a popular snack, sold by vendors on the side of the road. Black pudding also known as blood sausage, a well seasoned sausage made with rice, meat, and blood is also enjoyed by locals in Antigua. As you travel the roads of Antigua's countryside, you will see locals roasting fresh picked corn, usually in the husk, on makeshift grills ready to be purchased and eaten. Antigua is proud to claim their locally grown pineapples as one of the sweetest types to be found.
There are also several other "bad chaps" in the stories: the Woozy Wolf, Bushy Bear, Skillery Skallery Alligator and the fierce Bobcat, to name but a few. They all seem bent on nibbling the "souse" off Uncle Wiggily's ears, but he always escapes. In shorter, more formulaic stories, his escape is generally enabled by some implement he has just purchased at the store—often while on an errand for his muskrat housekeeper, Nurse Jane Fuzzy Wuzzy. For example, Uncle Wiggily once used an umbrella to foil the Skillery Skallery Alligator by thrusting it into the creature's mouth and opening it, thus preventing his biting the old gentleman rabbit.
Holes, or "hydraulics", (also known as "stoppers" or "souse-holes" (see also Pillows) are formed when water pours over the top of a submerged object, or underwater ledges, causing the surface water to flow back upstream toward the object. Holes can be particularly dangerous—a boater may become stuck under the surface in the recirculating water—or entertaining play-spots, where paddlers use the holes' features to perform various playboating moves. In high- and low-volume water flows, holes can subtly aerate the water, enough to allow craft to fall through the aerated water to the bottom of a deep 'hole'. Some of the most dangerous types of holes are formed by low-head dams (weirs), and similar types of obstructions.
Bloopers came into prominence in 1931, when radio announcer Harry Von Zell mispronounced or said the name of the then-President of the United States, Herbert Hoover, as "Hoobert Heever" on the air, but Schafer's is believed to be the first attempt at collecting and presenting them. Other similar famous finds of Schafer's include ABC correspondent Joel Daly intoning, "The rumor that the President would veto the bill is reported to have come from a high White Horse souse", and veteran radio host Paul Harvey breaking into uncontrollable laughter at a story about a pet poodle. These were collected and released in LP audio collections such as Pardon My Blooper! and Your Slip is Showing, which were briefly popular in the 1960s.
Fernande Albany played the janitor in the film. The scene in front of the stage door was shot outdoors, on Méliès's property in Montreuil, Seine-Saint-Denis, in front of the remaining section of a house that had belonged to his father Louis Méliès. (Some of the house had been taken down during the construction of Méliès's second and larger film studio, Studio B.) Georges Méliès had previously used the same location for his 1907 film The Good Luck of a "Souse". Based on an analysis of the surviving fragments of the film, a publication on Méliès's films by the Centre national du cinéma suggested that Buncoed Stage Johnnie may possibly have been directed not by Méliès himself but by his production assistant, the actor Manuel.
Charlotte de Curton was the daughter of Gérard de Vienne and Bénigne de Dinteville, and married first in 1536 to Jacques de Beaufort, Marquis de Canillac (1490-1546), and second in 1547 to the chevalier d'honneur to queen Catherine de Medici, Joachim de Chabannes, Seneschal of Toulouse (1502-1559). She was appointed souse gouvernante or sub-governess to the royal children under the supervision of the Governess of the Children of France. It was said about her by the historian Mongez that she had been "the gouvernante of seven queens and princesses". After the marriage of the princesses Elisabeth, Claude and Mary Stuart, she supervised the upbringing of Margaret of Valois in Vincennes and Amboise in collaboration with Henri Le Maignan.
Chitterlings were common peasant food in medieval England, and remained a staple of the diet of low-income families right up until the late nineteenth century and not uncommon into the mid twentieth century. Thomas Hardy wrote of chitterlings in his novel Tess of the D'Urbervilles, when the father of a poor family, John Durbeyfield, talks of what he would like to eat: > Tell 'em at home that I should like for supper—well, lamb's fry if they can > get it; and if they can't, black-pot; and if they can't get that, well, > chitterlings will do. It illustrates that chitterlings were the poorest choice of poor food. George Sturt, writing in 1919 details the food eaten by his farming family in Farnborough when he was a child (probably around 1830): > During the winter they had chance to weary of almost every form and kind of > pig-meat: hog's puddings, gammons, chitterlings, souse, salted > spareribs—they knew all the varieties and welcomed any change.
In many of the numbers his neatly polished libretto has more than mere verbal ingenuity, and his musical score, though by this time its conventions are familiar, shows a wide and diverting range both in parody and in construction... an acid Anglo-Indian scene with a chorus of sahibs declaiming that 'no matter how much we sozzle and souse, the sun never sets upon Government House', leads to a swinging mock-heroic number with the refrain 'But mad dogs and Englishmen go out in the midday sun' that has a true Gilbertian flavour.""New Coward Revue", A.S.W. The Manchester Guardian 26 August 1932, p. 11 The Times wrote, "Mr. Coward has the gift of attack... he had the audience cheering before the opening chorus was spent.... Mr. Coward has, above all else, the gift of satire, and this revue, being primarily satirical, is his best work in the musical kind... the active fierceness which is the distinction between genuine satire and empty sneering.
Leo Sulky (6 December 1874 – 3 June 1957) was an American actor. He usually appeared in films directed by Del Lord such as Black Oxfords (1924), Yukon Jake (1924), Wall Street Blues (1924), Lizzies of the Field (1924), Galloping Bungalows (1924), From Rags to Britches (1925), and A Sea Dog's Tale (1926); by Harry Edwards such as The Lion and the Souse (1924), The Luck o' the Foolish (1924). The Hansom Cabman (1924), All Night Long (1924), There He Goes (1925), The Sea Squawk (1925), Boobs in the Wood (1925), and Plain Clothes (1925); and by Ralph Ceder such as Little Robinson Corkscrew (1924), and Wandering Waistlines (1924). He also appeared in The First 100 Years (1924) by Harry Sweet, The Window Dummy (1925) by Lloyd Bacon, Hotsy Totsy (1925) by Alf Goulding, Alice Be Good (1926) by Eddie Cline, Picking Peaches (1924) by Erle C. Kenton, Romeo and Juliet (1924), She Couldn't Say No (1954), Reap the Wild Wind (1942), The Rainmakers (1935), The Jolly Jilter (1927) starring Lois Boyd and Bud Ross, The Wild Goose Chaser (1925) and A Raspberry Romance (1925).

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