tendie
English
Etymology
From chicken tender + -ie
Pronunciation
- (General American) IPA(key): /ˈtɛn.diː/
- Rhymes: -ɛndi
Noun
tendie (plural tendies)
- (food, colloquial, usually in the plural) A chicken tender.
- 2013 April 19, rachel.ka.smith [username], “Uhh...They reopened Manchu Wok”, in paginalife, Usenet:
- Grade "A" tendies and mozz sticks.
- 2015, Cynthia Rozzo, East Cobber Magazine, (May 2015 issue), pg. 38
- Favorite Food: Chicken Tendies
- 2015, Charlie Hickerson, Native magazine (issue 36), pg. 77
- It's an attitude that's certainly reflected during our interview at DOZA's house, where chicken tenders and Courvoisier (our dinner for the night) are referred to as "dank tendies and drank" [...]
- 2015, Devon Mann, Islands' Sounder (December 26, 2015 issue), pg. 5
- "The life of crime just pulls you in," says Gnineerg, "you think it's just one cheese stick then then [sic] you're dealing three or four bags of tendies a day. It's a dark road."
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