M&M's™
noun /ˌemənˈemz/
/ˌemənˈemz/
[plural]- small round chocolate sweets in various different colours and sometimes with peanuts or other things inside, that are covered with hard sugar to stop the chocolate melting in the hand. They were first sold in 1941, and are named after the two Americans who originally made them, Forrest Mars and Bruce Murrie.