A mixture of dried fruits, spices, suet, and sometimes alcohol used as a filling for mince pies, traditionally containing minced meat but now almost always meat-free; in the phrase to make mincemeat of — to completely defeat or demolish (an opponent or argument).
Origin
From mince (to cut into small pieces, from Old French mincier, Medieval Latin minutiare, from Latin minutus, small) + meat (originally meaning any food, from Old English mete, food). The compound was originally descriptive — meat that has been minced. The word meat in Old English meant food generally; the narrowing to animal flesh was a later development, though mincemeat retained its food-in-general sense through the transition. The phrase make mincemeat of derives from the image of completely breaking something down into small pieces.
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🎧 Podcast 2 — Daily Use
Mincemeat in Conversation
Two British speakers · Real everyday dialogue
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🌟 Podcast 3 — Prompt Engineering
Mincemeat — AI Prompts
5 copyable & speakable prompt cards · Google UK English voices
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