Wednesday, December 11, 2024

Merriam-Webster’s defines “haystacks” as “Adventist crack”

Share

Delish
Delish

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. — In a soon-to-be-published new edition, Merriam-Webster’s dictionary has listed an additional definition for the term “haystacks.”

In addition to it being the plural form of a word to describe a pile of hay, the editors of the volume added a definition which defines the word as “Adventist crack.”

The explanation for the new definition describes haystacks as “a highly addictive dish which routinely gathers Seventh-day Adventists of all ages to gorge on chips, salsa, cheese, assorted vegetables, sour cream, guacamole and so much more.”

Merriam-Webster’s went on to say that within the Adventist community, the dish was as habit forming as any back-alley drug.

The expanded definition that boasted near-encyclopedic detail explains that Adventists eat the dish with tremendous consistency at home, at church, at their schools and even while camping.

“Haystacks consumption is an all-pervasive custom that has filtered through to every part of Adventist living,” says the dictionary entry, “literally no aspect of Adventism has escaped its crunchy goodness.”


Advertise on BarelyAdventist

SPONSORED LINKS

WANTED: Adventists who are tired of being single. FREE! Adventist only dating site.

Share your Adventist faith & lifestyle through cool awesome t-shirts | SDAshirts.com

.

Read more

Local News