glad to see his old friend was still full of vinegar after so many years
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In his experience, white vinegar is helpful with hard water residue and older sweat stains on fabrics like clothing.—
Bridget Reed Morawski,
Architectural Digest,
17 July 2026 The first registers as a quasi Italian ketchup, sweet with tomato paste, a little red wine vinegar and garlic.—
Jenn Harris,
Los Angeles Times,
16 July 2026 Vinegar Makes Your Summer Produce Stand Out By far one of the best uses for vinegar this summer is pairing it with your seasonal produce.—
Sophia Beams,
Better Homes & Gardens,
16 July 2026 Pair this sandwich with a vinegar-y side, such as crisp dill pickles, German-style potato salad, coleslaw, or sauerkraut.—
Erin Merhar,
Southern Living,
15 July 2026 See All Example Sentences for vinegar
Word History
Etymology
Middle English vinegre, from Anglo-French vin egre, from vin wine (from Latin vinum) + egre keen, sour — more at eager
: a sour liquid obtained from cider, wine, or malt and used to flavor or preserve foods
Etymology
Middle English vinegre "vinegar," from early French vin egre (same meaning), literally, "sour wine," from vin "wine" and egre "sharp, sour, eager"; vin from Latin vinum "wine" and egre from Latin acer "sharp, sour, spirited" — related to eager, vine, vintage
: a sour liquid used as a condiment or a preservative that is obtained by acetic fermentation of dilute alcoholic liquids (as fermented cider, malt beer, or wine) or of dilute distilled alcohol
2
: a pharmaceutical solution of the active principles of drugs in dilute acetic acid usually prepared by maceration