ketchup · noun — such a sauce more generally (not necessarily based on tomatoes, but with mushrooms, fish, etc.). This is the older meaning.
Definition from Wiktionary (CC BY-SA 3.0).
ketchup is pronounced /ˈkɛt͡ʃ.əp/.
Etymology
Uncertain, but probably ultimately from Hokkien 膎汁 (kê-chiap, “fish sauce”) via Malay kecap ~ kicap “any dark clear sauce from soy, fish etc”, though the precise path is unclear – there are related words in various Chinese languages. Various other theories exist – see Ketchup: Etymology for extended discussion. First appeared in English in the late 17th century in reference to a Southeast Asian sauce encountered by British traders and sailors. The Oxford English Dictionary notes that it was commonly used in the 18th century to refer to a variety of similar sauces with varying ingredients—"anchovies, mushrooms, walnuts, and oysters being particularly popular"—but by the late 19th century the current tomato ketchup became the most popular form. Catsup (earlier catchup) is an alternative Angl
noun
- Such a sauce more generally (not necessarily based on tomatoes, but with mushrooms, fish, etc.). This is the older meaning.e.g.“The bottles, however, were port bottles, but contained mushroom ketchup; […]” — 1883, Cassell's Dictionary of Cookery, page lxxxiii:
verb
- To cover with ketchup.e.g.“It strikes me she's "ketchupped" the lot! I won't touch a morsel!” — 1867, John Maddison Morton, Aunt Charlotte's maid: a farce in one act:
Definitions & examples from Wiktionary (CC BY-SA 3.0).