logo       

John Barleycorn: msg#00018

culture.language.word-of-the-day

Subject: John Barleycorn

****************************************************************
Attention word gurus: try WORD SWEEP!, the first board game to feature
Merriam-Webster definitions! Available at Borders Bookstores.
http://www.wordsweep.com
****************************************************************

The Word of the Day for April 20 is:

John Barleycorn \JAHN-BAR-lee-korn\ noun
: alcoholic liquor personified

Example sentence:
"Eureka was, after all, the last home of Carry Nation, that ax-wielding
foe of John Barleycorn, Demon Rum and all their evil ilk." (Charles Allbright,
_Arkansas Democrat-Gazette_, November 19, 2003)

Did you know?
"Inspiring bold John Barleycorn! / What dangers thou canst make us scorn!"
Robert Burns wasn't the first to use "John Barleycorn" as a personification of
liquor when he penned those lines in his poem _Tam O'Shanter_ in the late
1700s. The term had been part of English vernacular for more than 150 years
before Burns's heyday, but the poet played a key role in popularizing it by
carrying it into literature. "Barleycorn" undoubtedly became part of that
euphemism for alcohol because barleycorns (that is, grains of barley) are a key
ingredient in malt liquor. And "John" has long been used as a generic name or
personifier in English.





You Are Subscribed As: gclw-mw-wod7@xxxxxxxxx
To unsubscribe, change your e-mail address or to subscribe to the html
version of Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day, featuring audio
pronunciations, please visit:

http://mw.drhinternet.net/sm/wod/changeofaddress.iphtml

(c) 2007 by Merriam-Webster, Incorporated

Merriam-Webster, Inc.
47 Federal Street
P.O. Box 281
Springfield, MA 01102




<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>
Google Custom Search

News | FAQ | advertise