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[personal profile] venta
I'm confused about the word pitt. I think it's spelled with two t's.

The stone in an olive is called a pitt. A thing-for-getting-the-stones-out-of-olives is called an olive pitter.

Therefore a pitted olive is one which has had its stone removed.

I bought some olives which I was told weren't pitted. They have no stones.

Therefore a pitted olive is one which contains a pit - ie hasn't had its stone removed.

This could all be explained by me having just been misinformed about my olives. But I have heard people using the word pitted in both contexts.

Worse, the olives are upstairs in the fridge and no one will go and get them for me. It's a hard life.

Date: 2004-05-21 04:57 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] venta.livejournal.com
A quick visit to dictionary.com suggests you are right.

I just got carried away with all the t's in pitted. Or something.

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