waterglassful
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From water glass + -ful.
Noun
[edit]waterglassful (plural waterglassfuls)
- As much as a water glass will hold.
- 1876 February 14, “The Household. Recipes and Recommendations, Practical and Ornamental.”, in The Evening Star[1], volume 47, number 7,140, Washington, D.C.:
- […] add gently a table-spoonful of flour (stirring all the while), and a water-glassful of good stock, with salt and pepper;
- 1905 March 4, “Found Poison in Water. Chemist Finds Strychnine in the Bottle of Poland Water.”, in Oakland Tribune, volume LXIII, number 11, Oakland, Calif., section “The Dose”, page 5:
- A waterglassful, five fluid ounces, would hold in solution about 0.8 grains of strychnia.
- 1907, I[smar Isidor] Boas, translated by Albert Bernheim, Diseases of the Stomach, Philadelphia, Pa.: F. A. Davis Company, page 535:
- Fasting stomach: two waterglassfuls of contents.
- 1945, Raymond Chandler, Five Sinister Characters, Avon Book Company, page 57:
- He poured himself half a waterglassful of the whiskey out of the pint bottle which he had gone out to buy.
- 1953, Esquire’s Handbook for Hosts, New York, N.Y.: Grosset & Dunlap, page 29:
- When the seeds begin to crackle—in about a minute—pour four waterglassfuls of cold water over them.
- 1972, Charles Bukowski, edited by Gail Chiarrello, Erections, Ejaculations, Exhibitions and General Tales of Ordinary Madness, City Lights Books, published July 1974, →ISBN, page 68:
- that settled her for a bit and we sat for a bit and we sat drinking down the waterglassfuls of wine, port.
- 1978, Ararat, page 40:
- At lunch-time and in the evening men drop in to drink a waterglassful of vodka, usually in one drought, followed by a chaser of Pepsi-Cola or pickled vegetables.
- 2013, E.M. Schorb, A Portable Chaos, revised edition, AuthorHouse, →ISBN, page 175:
- He poured them each a great big waterglassful of the rot-gut he usually drank, and, beaming madly, toasted, “Prost!”