0 small pieces, usually of cloth, that have been cut from larger pieces:
a few oddments of fabric
1 small things, objects, or pieces of something, usually of many different types:
Fourthly, they said that there may be other oddments necessary to carry out the work of the holding company, and they also get these.
My own election address was full of such oddments.
They can either get a bedroom suite less a bed, or a dining-room suite, or a drawing-room suite, plus a few oddments.
However, there is a sort of rococo embellishment of draftsmen by which all sorts of oddments are added, and those oddments tend to incite suspicion.
In a warship, the scrambag is the bag in which all lost and found clothes and oddments are stowed away.
They are a series of mutually contradictory oddments of policy.
It is a thing of rags and patches; it is a crazy quilt, made up of oddments of all sizes and shapes.
The payment of compensation to a man whose land is left smothered with old rusty iron and all sorts of oddments is not much use.