The other is a Jersey bruiser, with a (much-discussed) physique reminiscent of Tony Soprano after a doughnut bender.
Squishes, Step Aside: Ted Cruz and Chris Christie’s Old-School Manliness|Michelle Cottle|May 13, 2013|DAILY BEAST
“Pretty good thing,” says Lynch, biting into his doughnut, totally undisturbed.
David Lynch Discusses Transcendental Meditation in Los Angeles|Sean Macaulay|April 7, 2013|DAILY BEAST
Afterwards, in the green room, Lynch sits on a sofa and munches on a doughnut.
David Lynch Discusses Transcendental Meditation in Los Angeles|Sean Macaulay|April 7, 2013|DAILY BEAST
The Daily Pic: The crème brûlée "bismarck" from the Doughnut Plant is a great aesthetic creation.
Mona Lisa of the Coffee Shop|Blake Gopnik|February 5, 2013|DAILY BEAST
Lauren Conrad has become synonymous with the doughnut bun, an obsession with pearls, peachy glossed lips, and a milky manicure.
From ‘The Hills’ to Over the Hill: Lauren Conrad’s Premature Aging|Anna Klassen|September 24, 2012|DAILY BEAST
Oh, not anything much, said the young man, helping himself to a doughnut from a plate which stood within easy reach.
Wheat and Huckleberries|Charlotte Marion (White) Vaile
Moved by the doughnut example of the Ground Owl, he tasted that delicacy.
The Sunset Trail|Alfred Henry Lewis
He did not go down to supper when Mrs. Dearborn called him, so she went up after a while with a glass of milk and a doughnut.
Big Brother|Annie Fellows-Johnston
The inflated "doughnut" that slipped so easily up and down my own brawny brisket would just about have served Joanna as an armlet.
Down the Yellowstone|Lewis R. Freeman
The doughnut as an edible proved kindly to the palate of Mr. Allison, and upon experiment he desired more.
The Sunset Trail|Alfred Henry Lewis
British Dictionary definitions for doughnut
doughnut
espUSdonut
/ (ˈdəʊnʌt) /
noun
a small cake of sweetened dough, often ring-shaped or spherical with a jam or cream filling, cooked in hot fat
anything shaped like a ring, such as the reaction vessel of a thermonuclear reactor
verb-nuts, -nuttingor-nutted
(tr)informal(of Members of Parliament) to surround (a speaker) during the televising of Parliament to give the impression that the chamber is crowded or the speaker is well supported