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gingerbread

American  
[jin-jer-bred] / ˈdʒɪn dʒərˌbrɛd /

noun

  1. a type of cake flavored with ginger and molasses.

  2. a rolled cookie similarly flavored, often cut in fanciful shapes, and sometimes frosted.

  3. elaborate, gaudy, or superfluous architectural ornamentation.

    a series of gables embellished with gingerbread.


adjective

  1. heavily, gaudily, and superfluously ornamented.

    a gingerbread style of architecture.

gingerbread British  
/ ˈdʒɪndʒəˌbrɛd /

noun

  1. a moist brown cake, flavoured with ginger and treacle or syrup

    1. a rolled biscuit, similarly flavoured, cut into various shapes and sometimes covered with icing

    2. ( as modifier )

      gingerbread man

    1. an elaborate but unsubstantial ornamentation

    2. ( as modifier )

      gingerbread style of architecture

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

Other Word Forms

  • gingerbready adjective

Etymology

Origin of gingerbread

1250–1300; Middle English gingebreed (influenced by breed bread), variant of gingebrad, -brat ginger paste < Old French gingembras, -brat preserved ginger < Medieval Latin *gingi ( m ) brātum a medicinal preparation (neuter past participle), derivative of Latin gingiber ginger

Explanation

Gingerbread is a rich, spicy cake or cookie. Some people mark the Christmas season by making gingerbread houses covered in icing and candy. The key ingredient in this delicious treat is the spice called ginger. The original meaning of the word gingerbread was "preserved ginger," and then it came to mean "ginger candy made with honey and spices." It was some time in the 15th century that what we now know as gingerbread was first invented: a rich, flavorful cookie or cake full of ginger and other spices and sweetened with molasses.

Keep Reading on Vocabulary.com

Vocabulary lists containing gingerbread

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

They come from a doum palm or gingerbread tree, known in the area as "mikwamo".

From BBC • Mar. 19, 2026

But in the meantime, seasonal enthusiasm for the house could be satisfied by a gingerbread facsimile thereof that was open to the public in Hollywood.

From MarketWatch • Dec. 29, 2025

Forged from the spicy gingerbread dough in our recipe below, the resulting centerpiece—or flurry of individual snowflakes, if you prefer—is edible and visually enticing.

From The Wall Street Journal • Dec. 5, 2025

But having had it in year’s past, as well as a Halloween version of the cookie just a couple weeks ago, I can vouch for the fact that it is quality, soft gingerbread.

From Los Angeles Times • Nov. 19, 2025

I noticed the faded porch with its ornate woodwork and realized I was at the worn-out gingerbread house that belonged to the stony lady who always sat on the porch.

From "Moon Over Manifest" by Clare Vanderpool