zythepsary
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Derived from Ancient Greek ζῦθος (zûthos, “barley beer”) + ἕψω (hépsō, “to boil”).
Noun
[edit]zythepsary (plural zythepsaries)
- (rare, obsolete) A brewery.
- 1861, uncredited contributor, “Wandering Words” in All the Year Round, Volume 5, No. 106, 4 May, 1961, p. 144,[1]
- But the oddest things of all are to be found in the dictionaries. Why they are all kept there no one knows; but what man in his senses would use such words as zythepsary for a brew-house, and zumologist for a brewer […]
- 1937, Saturday Review of Literature - Volume 17, page 13:
- ...and we Employ the same old diastase In orgulous zythepsaries.
- 1950, The Listener - Volume 43, page 451:
- Zythepsary equipment — there's a vast change nowadays!
- 2001, Richard Flanagan, “The Porcupine Fish”, in Gould’s Book of Fish[2], New York: Grove, VI, p. 121:
- He was full of inkhorn words going so far as to call grog shops zythepsaries, which seemed several syllables too long to be uttered by any I had ever met within such places […]
- 1861, uncredited contributor, “Wandering Words” in All the Year Round, Volume 5, No. 106, 4 May, 1961, p. 144,[1]