oddment

Noun

 * 1) A part of something that is left over, such as a piece of cloth.
 * 2) * 1926,, , Chapter6, in The Complete Ronald Firbank, Norfolk, CT: J. Laughlin, p.667,
 * ‘Ps! ps!’ she purred, feeling amorously for her scissors beneath the sumptuous oddments of old church velvet and brocade that she loved to ruffle and ruck.
 * 1) Something that does not match the things it is with or cannot easily be categorized; a miscellaneous item.
 * 2)  An item that was originally part of a set but is sold individually; an excess item of stock.
 * 3)  A part of a book that is not a portion of the text, such as the title, index, etc. (usually plural).
 * 4) A person who does not fit in with others or is considered to be strange in some way.
 * 5) A varied collection (of items).
 * 6) * 1862, (as Cuthbert Bede), “The Agreeable Monk” in The Curate of Cranston; with Other Prose and Verse, London: Saunders, Otley, p.281,
 * there are two or three tables, where are newspapers, and some of the latest periodicals and reviews, and a miscellaneous oddment of the current sacred and profane literature, stacked for convenience of reference
 * 1) A remaining number or amount (after a calculation).
 * 2) * 1877, Robert Roberts (ed.), The Apophthegmes of Erasmus Translated into English by Nicolas Udall, Boston, Lincolnshire: Robert Roberts, Appendix, p.459,
 * When they went to market, a basket of eggs was one of their most frequent charges, and in making their purchases at various shops the tradesman would often be asked “to take eggs for money” to a certain extent; especially when the sum to pay left an “oddment,” such as 4d. or 8d.
 * 1) Something strange or unusual.
 * 1)  A part of a book that is not a portion of the text, such as the title, index, etc. (usually plural).
 * 2) A person who does not fit in with others or is considered to be strange in some way.
 * 3) A varied collection (of items).
 * 4) * 1862, (as Cuthbert Bede), “The Agreeable Monk” in The Curate of Cranston; with Other Prose and Verse, London: Saunders, Otley, p.281,
 * there are two or three tables, where are newspapers, and some of the latest periodicals and reviews, and a miscellaneous oddment of the current sacred and profane literature, stacked for convenience of reference
 * 1) A remaining number or amount (after a calculation).
 * 2) * 1877, Robert Roberts (ed.), The Apophthegmes of Erasmus Translated into English by Nicolas Udall, Boston, Lincolnshire: Robert Roberts, Appendix, p.459,
 * When they went to market, a basket of eggs was one of their most frequent charges, and in making their purchases at various shops the tradesman would often be asked “to take eggs for money” to a certain extent; especially when the sum to pay left an “oddment,” such as 4d. or 8d.
 * 1) Something strange or unusual.
 * 1) * 1862, (as Cuthbert Bede), “The Agreeable Monk” in The Curate of Cranston; with Other Prose and Verse, London: Saunders, Otley, p.281,
 * there are two or three tables, where are newspapers, and some of the latest periodicals and reviews, and a miscellaneous oddment of the current sacred and profane literature, stacked for convenience of reference
 * 1) A remaining number or amount (after a calculation).
 * 2) * 1877, Robert Roberts (ed.), The Apophthegmes of Erasmus Translated into English by Nicolas Udall, Boston, Lincolnshire: Robert Roberts, Appendix, p.459,
 * When they went to market, a basket of eggs was one of their most frequent charges, and in making their purchases at various shops the tradesman would often be asked “to take eggs for money” to a certain extent; especially when the sum to pay left an “oddment,” such as 4d. or 8d.
 * 1) Something strange or unusual.
 * 1) * 1877, Robert Roberts (ed.), The Apophthegmes of Erasmus Translated into English by Nicolas Udall, Boston, Lincolnshire: Robert Roberts, Appendix, p.459,
 * When they went to market, a basket of eggs was one of their most frequent charges, and in making their purchases at various shops the tradesman would often be asked “to take eggs for money” to a certain extent; especially when the sum to pay left an “oddment,” such as 4d. or 8d.
 * 1) Something strange or unusual.
 * 1) Something strange or unusual.
 * 1) Something strange or unusual.
 * 1) Something strange or unusual.
 * 1) Something strange or unusual.

Translations

 * Bulgarian:
 * Maori: mōmōhanga