Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
WordNet
n. pickle preserved in brine or vinegar flavored with dill seed
Usage examples of "dill pickle".
Jonathan saw one rolling the dill pickle keg along the deck and off into the river, and it bobbed along near the canoe for a moment before the current took it and swept it on toward the sea.
Mama sniffed and began to put together, right there in the store, a lunch big enough to fill someone three times Anna's size: more cheese, a dill pickle, salami, a tomato, bread, cookies, and a Mclntosh, one of Anna's favorite kinds of apple.
We chatted idly while she busied herself with the sandwich preparations, wrapping my dill pickle in a square of waxed paper so it wouldn't make the bread all mushy, she said.
Danger always gave him an appetite and the thought of a corned beef on rye sandwich and a fat dill pickle made his mouth water.
I ate while I drove, steering with one hand as I alternated bites of dill pickle and tuna sandwich.
Munching on potato chips and a fat dill pickle, she made follow-up calls to the local police, and to the authorities in Vermont and New Hampshire.
Meany was stirring a glass of champagne with a dill pickle the size of this thick forefinger.
Nina said, putting one half of the sandwich and half thepotato chips, half the cole slaw, and the entire dill pickle on an emptybread dish and pushing the dish toward Chelsea.
He opened a can of mixed nuts and dumped them into a soup bowl, filled another bowl with dill pickle chips, and arranged a platter of crackers and meatloaf slices.
Even (and Sable was especially pleased with this) an artificial slice of dill pickle.
She carried a small bouquet of lilacs arranged in a dill pickle bottle she had washed the label off.