From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishomeletteome‧lette (also omelet American English) /ˈɒmlət $ ˈɑːm-/ noun [countable] 1 DFFeggs mixed together and cooked in hot fat, sometimes with other foods added a cheese omelette2 → you can’t make an omelette without breaking eggs
Examples from the Corpus
omelette• For the less adventurous there are always omelettes or chips.• I ate rolls and an omelette and washed them down with coffee.• If I make an omelette of your eggs or a statue out of your block of marble, that is conversion.• Crawfish omelette Cajun omelettes are more like scrambled eggs.• We ate a pair of greasy omelettes at a restaurant overlooking the water, then drove around the edge of the lake.• Suppose that the goal is a mushroom omelette.• Cramped wooden benches, a friendly welcome for regulars and improbably large plates of home-made pies, omelettes, grills and chips.