English edit

Etymology edit

From pig +‎ flesh.

Noun edit

pigflesh (uncountable)

  1. The flesh of a pig.
    Synonyms: pigmeat, pork, swineflesh, swinemeat
    • 1909, H[enry] Wilfrid Walker, “Index”, in Wanderings among South Sea Savages and in Borneo and the Philippines, London: Witherby & Co. [], →OCLC, page 251, column 2:
      Pigflesh in New Guinea, 125 / —⁠— compared with human in Fiji, 45-46
    • 1915, E[rnest] W[illiam] P[earson] Chinnery, W[ilfred] N[orman] Beaver, “Notes on the Initiation Ceremonies of the Koko, Papua”, in The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, volume XLV, London: [] [T]he Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, [], page 77:
      Then the old men say, “You must not make a garden until we have eaten the pigs.” These are then served out and the boys are told, “You must not eat anything until you are really hungry; just bite the food and then put it aside,” and accordingly the lads bite the pigflesh and set it aside. The women cook some taro in pots, which the boys are permitted to eat, while the pigflesh is consumed by the old men.
    • 2010, Scott Westerfeld, “Non-Disclosure Agreement”, in Tim Pratt, editor, Sympathy for the Devil, San Francisco, Calif.: Night Shade Books, →ISBN, page 141:
      Despite ourselves, we’d gotten the footage we needed. Frame-by-frame analysis revealed how the pigflesh charred while the greedy napalm burned, the pigs’ innards curling out to embrace the flame, providing fuel from within.
    • 2014, C. P. Boyko [Craig Boyko], “The Word ‘Genius’”, in Novelists: Stories, Windsor, Ont.: Biblioasis, →ISBN, page 8:
      He remembered how her eyes had shone with emotion. Yet it was all doomed to end here, at this awful table, with these horrible, still-quivering strips of fried pigflesh on the plate before him!

Translations edit