English

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Noun

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ring-cake (plural ring-cakes)

  1. (US) A cake having a ring baked inside it, with slices sold as a form of lottery. Once a common feature of church fairs.
    • 1870, Jeremiah N. Thomas, “Jonadab Cleaver's Experiment; Or, the Last Church Fair at Rutway”, in Sabbath at Home[1]:
      Then pointing successively to the lottery-table, grab-box, ring-cake, and cigars, he continued []
    • 1887, “The Book World”, in The Sunday-school World[2]:
      Then there is the church fair with its grab-bag having a silver pencil, and its ring-cake from which some one will get a gold ring for five cents.