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单词 alcoholic
释义

alcoholicadj.n.

Brit. /ˌalkəˈhɒlɪk/, U.S. /ˌælkəˈhɔlɪk/, /ˌælkəˈhɑlɪk/
Forms: 1700s alcoholick, 1700s alkoholic, 1700s– alcoholic.
Origin: Formed within English, by derivation. Etymons: alcohol n., -ic suffix.
Etymology: < alcohol n. + -ic suffix. In sense A. 2 after French alcoolique, adjective (1789 in this sense, in the passage translated in quot. 1789; 1800 or earlier in sense A. 1; 1865 in sense ‘of or relating to alcoholism, (of an illness) caused by alcohol’).The uses as noun are not paralleled in French or other European languages until later; compare e.g. French alcoolique, noun (1872 in sense ‘alcoholic drink’, 1873 in sense ‘person who is addicted to alcoholic drinks’), German Alkoholika (plural noun) alcoholic drinks collectively, Alkoholiker person addicted to alcoholic drinks (both late 19th cent.).
A. adj.
1. Of a thermometer: using alcohol as the liquid whose position in the bore of a thin glass tube indicates the temperature.
ΚΠ
1732 in tr. H. Boerhaave Elem. Chymistry I. 40 A mercurial instead of alcoholick Glass, it settled from 16 above 0 to 14 under it.
1804 B. Lambert tr. C. L. Berthollet Ess. Chem. Statics I. 417 Blagden having put two alcoholic thermometers with a mercurial one into a frigorific mixture, one of the two first marked 29°, and the other 30°, while that with the mercury was at 40° Fahr.
1870 S. A. Norton Elem. Nat. Philos. viii. 310 Alcoholic thermometers are even less reliable, because the expansion of alcohol at all temperatures is exceedingly irregular.
1904 H. S. Williams Hist. Sci. V. iv. 83 The temperature of liquid hydrogen—a temperature far below that at which the contents of even an alcoholic thermometer are solidified.
1980 Ecol. Bull. No. 32. 79 Measurements of air temperature..were performed..with mercury and alcoholic thermometers.
2.
a. Chiefly Chemistry. Of or relating to an alcohol, esp. ethanol; characteristic of an alcohol.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > chemistry > organic chemistry > alcohols > [adjective]
alcoholic1789
1789 R. Kerr tr. A. Lavoisier Elements Chem. 51 The combination of alkohol with caloric, becomes alkoholic gas [Fr. gaz alcoolique].
1833 C. Redding Hist. Mod. Wines xv. 323 Some ingenious observations..upon the alcoholic principle in wine.
1878 W. Hardman Wine-growers & Wine-coopers’ Man. viii. 92 Only the purer alcoholic vapour can pass up to the chest, which unites all the chambers of the rectificator.
1922 J. J. Sudborough Bernthsen's Text-bk. Org. Chem. (new ed.) xxv. 446 While the phenols remind us of the tertiary alcohols of the fatty series, although they differ from these in many points, we are acquainted with compounds which possess the alcoholic character in its entirety; they are termed aromatic alcohols.
1960 F. G. Mann & B. C. Saunders Pract. Org. Chem. (ed. 4) ii. 76 The initial reaction between ethanol and a strong acid such as sulphuric acid involves protonation of the alcoholic oxygen to form an oxonium ion.
1999 M. Pooley & J. Lomax Real Cidermaking x. 59 Adding white sugar at this point will increase the alcoholic strength of the final cider.
b. Chemistry. Of a solution or solute: dissolved or dispersed in an alcohol, esp. ethanol. Of an extract: obtained by solution in an alcohol.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > drink > intoxicating liquor > [adjective]
sprighty1609
spirituous1653
Panomphaean1694
wet1779
alcoholic1799
Panomphic1822
spiritual1826
panomphaic1878
1799 R. Kirwan Ess. Anal. Mineral Waters i. ii. 124 The alkaline nitrats and muriats will be excluded from the alcoholic solution.
1838 T. Thomson Chem. Org. Bodies 94 Digest the bark in alcohol, evaporate the alcoholic solution to dryness.
1936 S. A. Waksman Humus vi. 137 Paraffinic acid, C24H48O2, was isolated..from the cold alcoholic extract.
1991 Jrnl. Medicinal Chem. 34 3365/1 After cooling to room temperature, the alcoholic solution was diluted with anhydrous Et2O.
2008 Herald (Glasgow) (Nexis) 29 Mar. (Mag.) 6 Brompton mixture was an alcoholic solution containing morphine and cocaine, administered mostly to terminally ill patients.
c. Biology. Of a specimen: preserved in an alcohol, esp. ethanol; of or relating to such specimens.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > biology > laboratory analysis > processes > [adjective] > treatment with specific agents
alcoholic1852
bacterized1915
phenolized1920
osmicated1921
hormonized1940
oestrogenized1944
trypsinized1952
mutagenized1963
1852 J. D. Dana U.S. Exploring Exped.: Crustacea Pt. I 185 The specimen, an alcoholic one, has a pale brown colour.
1894 Pop. Sci. Monthly Feb. 458 These notes and drawings, together with the alcoholic specimens, are stowed away awaiting further investigation.
1946 T. Barbour Naturalist's Scrapbk. ii. 46 The several thousands of faded alcoholic specimens on the shelves were soon relegated to the study laboratories.
2004 Assoc. Press State & Local Wire (Nexis) 3 Dec. Specimens in the alcoholic collections—that's not bottles, but collections of fish, amphibians, reptiles and invertebrates named for the preservative solution—are housed across the Hudson River.
3.
a. Of a liquid, esp. a drink: containing alcohol (ethanol), and so potentially intoxicating. Frequently in alcoholic beverage, alcoholic drink, alcoholic liquor. Cf. non-alcoholic adj. 1.
ΚΠ
1823 Amer. Med. Recorder 6 411 The abuse of alcoholic drinks also exposes to much danger.
1844 Punch 13 Jan. 27 Pipes and alcoholic liquors are superseded by matrimony.
1878 J. J. Young Ceramic Art 170 Saki, or Sake, is the chief alcoholic drink of Japan, and is made from rice.
1917 Los Angeles Times 22 Apr. iii. 22 ‘Blackleg’ is strong drink, not alcoholic, however, simply the powerful black coffee served in the army.
1941 A. C. Bouquet Compar. Relig. iv. 162 The earliest attempts at a Yogic technique known to us seem to have been associated with the use of the alcoholic drink Soma.
1960 S. Unwin Truth about Publisher i. iii. 36 From that moment nothing alcoholic was kept in the house.
2008 Ecologist July 57/2 The flavour is rich enough to use as a mixer in alcoholic drinks.
b. spec. Designating a type of drink resembling a soft drink (typically in being sweet, carbonated, and similarly bottled), but containing added alcohol. Cf. alcopop n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > drink > intoxicating liquor > [adjective] > with alcohol added
spiritful1608
sprightful1615
spirituous1646
spirited1648
with a stick in it1808
well-laced1826
brandied1833
brandified1841
whiskied1850
spiked1909
needled1929
alcoholic1989
1989 Los Angeles Times (Nexis) 11 June i. 35/3 (heading) Alcoholic fruit drinks for children assailed.
1996 Daily Tel. (Nexis) 27 Mar. 18 There are circles among the twenty-somethings in which alcoholic lemonade is all the rage.
2011 Church Times 6 May 19/1 Halewood is based in Liverpool, which is perhaps best known for its alcoholic ginger-beer and Lambrini.
4. Resulting from or associated with excessive consumption of alcohol (ethanol) or alcoholism.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > ill health > a disease > disorders caused by poisons > [adjective] > caused by or involving poison > by drugs
alcoholic1830
the world > food and drink > drink > thirst > excess in drinking > [adjective] > alcoholic or addicted to drinking > caused by alcoholism
alcoholic1830
1830 W. Mackenzie Pract. Treat. Dis. Eye xix. 836 When no danger..is to be apprehended, as is the case in alcoholic poisoning, injections into the stomach..are to be preferred.
1850 W. B. Carpenter Use & Abuse Alcoholic Liquors i. 9 The term Intoxication..is commonly applied to alcoholic intoxication alone.
1882 Med. Temperance Jrnl. No. 50. 77 Symptoms of chronic alcoholic poisoning.
1889 Amer. Jrnl. Psychol. 2 664 The similarity to retroactive amnesia in fevers and alcoholic delirium is recalled.
1916 E. V. Lucas Vermilion Box 141 He was, as the slang phrase has it, ‘oiled’; which is a condition of alcoholic comfort well on this side of inebriety.
1949 H. W. C. Vines Green's Man. Pathol. (ed. 17) xii. 309 It is often stated that chronic alcoholism causes slow necrosis of the liver cells with replacement fibrosis, the condition known as alcoholic or multilobular cirrhosis.
1953 S. Kauffmann Philanderer xiv. 233 A lamp-lighted restaurant table, the distant sad-sweet music, all these flowed together in a comfortable alcoholic haze.
1991 J. Diski Happily ever After i. 4 He listened, in an alcoholic torpor, from the depths of his armchair, to the sounds of the house.
2004 Metro 8 Nov. (London ed.) (Metro Health Zone section) 5/2 Binge-drinking weakens the heart muscle and can lead to a condition called alcoholic cardiomyopathy, which causes heart failure.
5. Addicted to alcohol (ethanol), affected with alcoholism; showing the effect of habitually drinking alcohol; (also) under the influence of alcohol, inebriated.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > drink > thirst > excess in drinking > [adjective] > alcoholic or addicted to drinking
drunkensomea1300
drunkelew1362
drunksomec1475
drunken1548
boozing1569
boozy1592
bousy1592
moisty1593
unsober1611
upsy-friesy1617
moist1619
sottish1632
swilling1633
bibacious1663
intemperate1680
swill-bellied1680
swill-down1693
wet1699
potative1737
compotatory1817
alcoholic1845
drinking1856
bibulous1861
on the drink1865
1845 Emancipator & Weekly Chron. (Boston) 9 Apr. 197/3 I shout, Ho! help, come Jew and gentile, cold water and alcoholic men, rich and poor, the righteous and the profane.
1868 H. B. Day Opium Habit 204 He was merely self-ignorant—blind to the fact that in condemning the alcoholic inebriate he was by every word condemning himself as well.
1894 Evening Times (Cumberland, Maryland) 6 Apr. 2/2 Under the terms of this Act all existing definitions of drunkenness are abolished or amended so as to include the drug user as well as the alcoholic inebriate.
1907 A. R. Diefendorf Clin. Psychiatry (ed. 2) 169 The rate of mortality of the children of alcoholic mothers is twice as great during the first two years of life as of non-alcoholic mothers.
1929 J. Buchan Courts of Morning i. 35 Yanqui youth..is chronically alcoholic and amorous.
1957 Times Lit. Suppl. 8 Nov. 670/5 The girl is virtually imprisoned by the neurotic, psychotic and (it is apparent by this time) alcoholic novelist.
2008 Daily Tel. 25 Sept. 31/2 He found..lodgings with a Cockney family in Poplar, where he shared a bed with the son of the alcoholic landlady.
B. n.
1. In plural. Alcoholic drinks.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > drink > intoxicating liquor > [noun]
drink1042
liquor1340
bousea1350
cidera1382
dwale1393
sicera1400
barrelc1400
strong drinkc1405
watera1475
swig1548
tipple1581
amber1598
tickle-brain1598
malt pie1599
swill1602
spicket1615
lap1618
John Barleycornc1625
pottle1632
upsy Englisha1640
upsy Friese1648
tipplage1653
heartsease1668
fuddle1680
rosin1691
tea1693
suck1699
guzzlea1704
alcohol1742
the right stuff1748
intoxicant1757
lush1790
tear-brain1796
demon1799
rum1799
poison1805
fogram1808
swizzle1813
gatter1818
wine(s) and spirit(s)1819
mother's milkc1821
skink1823
alcoholics1832
jough1834
alky1844
waipiro1845
medicine1847
stimulant1848
booze1859
tiddly1859
neck oil1860
lotion1864
shrab1867
nose paint1880
fixing1882
wet1894
rabbit1895
shicker1900
jollop1920
mule1920
giggle-water1929
rookus juice1929
River Ouse1931
juice1932
lunatic soup1933
wallop1933
skimish1936
sauce1940
turps1945
grog1946
joy juice1960
1832 Boston Med. & Surg. Jrnl. 25 July 62 We can easily account for the cures ascribed to the sudden immersion in the cold bath; to emetics;..to large doses of alcoholics, and to mental impressions.
1870 Food Jrnl. Apr. 141 Any restriction on the sale of alcoholics.
1898 Memphis Lancet Sept. 194 This, of course, would include all persons given to the use of alcoholics, tobacco, and other toxic drugs.
1920 A. F. Pattee Pract. Dietetics (ed. 13) 83 The nurse may be required to exercise her own judgment at times in the emergency use of alcoholics in the sick room.
1998 C. V. Morpurgo in S. N. Ayrapetyan & A. V. Apkarian Pain Mechanisms & Managem. v. 356 The most important changes were observed..after the use of alcoholics, tea, coffee, Ritalin, etc.
2. A person who is addicted to alcoholic drink; one suffering from alcoholism. Cf. alky n. 2.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > drink > thirst > excess in drinking > [noun] > one who drinks to excess > alcoholic or habitual drinker
supper?1529
blow-bowl1530
drunkard1530
drunkera1538
blow-bottle1580
tippler1580
potman1589
red nose1591
sot1592
water rat1593
ply-pot1611
potter1632
pothead1639
pisspot1655
pitcher-man1665
whetter1709
inebriate1794
rummy1843
alcoholic1852
oenomaniac1857
dipsomaniac1858
alcoholizer1880
alcoholist1888
potationist1888
lush1890
rumdum1891
rumhound1895
blacklister1904
dipso1923
rumpot1929
alky1944
juice-head1955
alcohol abuser1965
juicer1967
substance abuser1967
jakey1988
1852 Sc. Temperance Rev. Apr. 177/2 O ye blessed alcoholics, how I envy you! while this cold clay of mine receives no such consolation.
1877 T. S. Arthur Grappling with Monster 76 Confirmed alcoholics constantly say that for this or that work, requiring thought and attention, it is necessary to forego some of the usual potations.
1909 Westm. Gaz. 25 Feb. 8/1 Warning him that deceased was a ‘chronic alcoholic’, and must have a bottle of port a day.
1957 New Yorker 26 Oct. 198/2 Its chief characters—a middle-aged civil servant, a young suburban housewife,..and a bartender and his wife—are alcoholics. So, for that matter, is the author.
1973 M. Muggeridge Infernal Grove i. 71 Like alcoholics after taking the cure—never another drop; well, just a taste perhaps, and then, before you could say knife, back on the meths.
2010 P. Daniels Class Actor iv. 27 There were a lot of prostitutes and alcoholics hanging about, and a lot of action went on in the hotels around the square.

Compounds

C1. Compounds of the adjective.
alcoholic fermentation n. [perhaps after French fermentation alcoolique (1792 or earlier; the source translated in quot. 1796 only uses fermentation vineuse (see vinous fermentation n. at vinous adj. 2b))] the type of fermentation occurring in yeast, in which glucose is broken down to produce ethanol and carbon dioxide (earlier called vinous fermentation); contrasted with lactic fermentation.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > chemistry > organic chemistry > chemical processes or reactions > [noun] > fermentation > in yeast
alcoholic fermentation1852
1796 R. Heron tr. A.-F. de Fourcroy Elements Chem. & Nat. Hist. I. (Philos. Chem.) xii. 105 Vinous or alcoholic fermentation is..a commencement of the destruction of those principles which are formed by vegetation.
1852 T. F. Betton tr. V. Regnault Elements Chem. II. iv. 511 We shall be satisfied with stating what is known concerning alcoholic fermentation.
1988 K. Lynch Adventures on Wine Route (1990) v. 152 The alcoholic fermentation occurs within the skin of each uncrushed grape.
2011 St. Louis (Missouri) Post-Dispatch (Nexis) 1 June l5 The Jean-Louis is..made through the charmat process, in which the wine goes through the alcoholic fermentation only once, in a closed vat.
alcoholic tincture n. see tincture n. 7b.
C2. Compounds of the noun.
Alcoholics Anonymous n. originally U.S. an association for the mutual support and rehabilitation of alcoholics; abbreviated A.A.The organization was founded at Akron, Ohio, in 1935.A proprietary name in the United States.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > drink > thirst > excess in drinking > [noun] > addiction to alcohol or habitual drinking > society for rehabilitation or support of
Alcoholics Anonymous1939
AA1940
Al-Anon1952
Alateen1958
1939 Alcoholics Anonymous ii. 27 We, of Alcoholics Anonymous, know one hundred men who were just as hopeless as Bill. All have recovered. They have solved the drink problem.
1951 I. Shaw Troubled Air ii. 28 You're jittery... Maybe you ought to join Alcoholics Anonymous.
1962 Lancet 2 June 1193/2 7 men attended meetings of Alcoholics Anonymous regularly. The impression was that those helped most by A.A. are the more stable and more intelligent.
1984 N.Y. Times 2 Jan. 21/2 The Roman Catholic rectory serves twice a week as the meeting place for the local chapter of Alcoholics Anonymous.
2007 Independent 6 Feb. 29/7 Like millions of others, she had recovered through the ‘12 steps’ method first laid out by Alcoholics Anonymous, which is used by Narcotics Anonymous.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2012; most recently modified version published online June 2022).
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adj.n.1732
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