A dish of boiled, mashed yams, plantain, or other starchy vegetables, common as food in equatorial Africa and the Caribbean. Sold in speciality stores in dry powdered or granulated form
Ezinma and her mother sat on a mat on the floor after their supper of yam foo-foo and bitter-leaf soup.
A metasyntactic variable used to represent an unspecified entity. If part of a series of such entities, it is often the first in the series, and followed immediately by bar
(Bilgisayar) The terms foobar, foo, bar, and baz are sometimes used as placeholder names (also referred to as metasyntactic variables) in computer programming or computer-related documentation. They have been used to name entities such as variables, functions, and commands whose purpose is unimportant and serve only to demonstrate a concept. The words themselves have no meaning in this usage. Foobar is sometimes used alone; foo, bar, and baz are sometimes used in that order, when multiple entities are needed