winesop
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Middle English wyne soppe, wynesoppe; equivalent to wine + sop.
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]winesop (plural winesops)
- A piece of bread soaked in wine; a small cake made with grapes or wine.
- 1877, Saturday review of politics, literature, science and art, volume 43, page 649:
- Hence the proverb […] "to reduce one whose meal is a winesop to a dry crust."
- 1974, Norah Lofts, Crown of aloes:
- Beatriz, for all her seeming frailty, had borne the long strain better, and presently came, offering winesops, the recognised restorative; small pieces of fine white bread soaked in wine.
- circa 1982, John Payne, Decameron (translated from Giovanni Boccaccio's Italian):
- His wife gave her a winesop to eat and after, undressing her, put her to bed; and they contrived that night to have her and her maid carried to Florence.
- 2006, Rae Katherine Eighmey, How creative cooks fed the soul and spirit of America's heartland, page 23:
- Winesops
1 cup butter
1 1.2 cups brown sugar, firmly packed
1 cup molasses
[…]
1 cup currants
- (figuratively, by extension, derogatory) A drunkard, a wino.
- 1913, Robert Louis Stevenson, Lloyd Osbourne, The ebb-tide: A trio and a quartette, page 214:
- "I'm going to give you Mr. Whish — or the winesop that remains of him," continued Attwater.
- 2000, Stephen Lawhead, Avalon: The Return of King Arthur, page 61:
- […] "we're being maneuvered into providing a gala State funeral for that reprobate winesop."
- 2003, Sagas of Conan, page 293:
- "Aye, he was good at skulking around and acting like a winesop or an idiot."
Synonyms
[edit]- (drunkard): alcoholic, souse, suck-pint; See also Thesaurus:drunkard