Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
But it looks as though there might be a sequel to Salmagundi after all.
As of 2009, the Salmagundi Club has more than eight hundred members.
He also has a regular column in the quarterly journal Salmagundi.
Stephens was a member of the Salmagundi Club and others.
Salmagundi, the department spokesman, careful not to make too big a deal of the witness angle.
The term may come from the British word salmagundi, used to refer to a salad of many different ingredients.
It was clear that for some shoppers in Salmagundi recently, those larger economic forces have upended their sense of place.
The salmagundi is truly the best in London.
Salmagundi is a quarterly journal that focuses on the humanities and social sciences.
Salmagundi is also purportedly a meal served on pirate ships.
Salmagundi is used figuratively in modern English to mean a mixture or assortment of things.
For weeks, area residents were on tenterhooks waiting to see whether Salmagundi could be saved or a replacement found.
I'm glad I didn't, though a lot of the Salmagundi men go over there and like it.
Salmagundi is a salad dish that originated in England.
In 1911, he showed at the Salmagundi Club.
Nevertheless the period produced many compelling artists, and not a few of them belonged to the Salmagundi Club.
The Salmagundi Club was no doubt taken all the more seriously with names like theirs on the roster.
We even did a column called Sally's Salmagundi, which meant medley or mixture.
Around 1993, the story first appeared as one half of a photocopied, digest size flip comic book Salmagundi.
"I've gotten you a guest card at Salmagundi.
They also serve as a reminder that the Salmagundi Club was a brotherly society of painters.
The Duck in the Gun and Salmagundi are explicitly anti-war books.
In 1905, he held his first exhibition at the Salmagundi Club, establishing himself as both a cartoonist and a serious painter.
Matsuki was first woman member of the Salmagundi Club.
There are no misfits in Paraguay because in this peculiar salmagundi of a place, everyone fits, more or less.