English edit

Noun edit

porkchop (plural porkchops)

  1. (chiefly attributive) Alternative form of pork chop
    • 1972 December, Cary S Baker, “The New Chicago Street Blues”, in Blues Unlimited, number 97, page 16:
      I sat on a parked car's hoot watching, eating a porkchop sandwich I'd bought at a nearby food booth.
    • 1996, Geoffrey Douglas, The Game of Their Lives, New York, N.Y.: Henry Holt and Company, →ISBN, page 10:
      “Anyway, we’re sitting down to dinner at his house, and there’s this plate of porkchops on the table. The only thing was—and I didn’t know it till it happened, it sort of took me back—you only got a porkchop if you worked. / “That was the rule. The porkchops went to the workers, nobody else. Didn’t matter who you were, how old you were. Tommy didn’t get a porkchop, I didn’t get a porkchop. I’ve always remembered that.”
    • 2004, Robert W. Sehlinger, Frommer’s Best RV and Tent Campgrounds in the U.S.A., 2nd edition, Wiley, →ISBN, page 405:
      A porkchop-shaped camping area is set along the south cove of 12-mile Sebec Lake.