sluicery

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English

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Etymology

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From sluice +‎ -ery.

Noun

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sluicery (plural sluiceries)

  1. (slang, archaic) A gin shop or public house.
    • 1869, Meliora, volume 12, page 47:
      When men go into a 'sluicery' for a 'sensation,' a 'drain,' or a 'common sewer,' they call the glass of gin they seek, in allusion to the juniper, a 'nipper,' or, more briefly, a 'nip,' occasionally a 'bite,' and not unfrequently it turns out a 'flogger.'

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