Definitions

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.

  • noun Whiskey.

from The Century Dictionary.

  • noun Distilled spirit made by the Celtic people of the British Islands, originally from barley. In this sense the term is still used in Scotland for malt whisky.

from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.

  • noun A compound distilled spirit made in Ireland and Scotland; whisky.
  • noun A liquor compounded of brandy, or other strong spirit, raisins, cinnamon and other spices.

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • noun whisky/whiskey

Etymologies

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition

[Scottish Gaelic uisge beatha and Irish Gaelic uisce beatha, water of life, whiskey (translation of Medieval Latin aqua vītae) : Old Irish uisce, water; see wed- in Indo-European roots + Old Irish bethad, genitive of bethu, life; see gwei- in Indo-European roots.]

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

Gaelic, from Irish and Scots Gaelic uisge beatha ‘water of life’.

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Examples

  • Some authorities consider that the word is derived from the first part of the term usquebaugh; others suppose it to be derived from the name of a place, the Basque provinces, where some such compound was concocted in the fourteenth century.

    An Illustrated History of Ireland from AD 400 to 1800 Mary Frances Cusack 1864

  • Two hundred years later, the Catalan scholar Arnaud of Villanova dubbed the active principle of wine aqua vitae, the “water of life,” a term that lives on in Scandinavia (aquavit), in France (eau de vie), and in English: whisky is the anglicized version of the Gaelic for “water of life,” uisge beatha or usquebaugh, which is what Irish and Scots monks called their distilled barley beer.

    On Food and Cooking, The Science and Lore of the Kitchen Harold McGee 2004

  • Two hundred years later, the Catalan scholar Arnaud of Villanova dubbed the active principle of wine aqua vitae, the “water of life,” a term that lives on in Scandinavia (aquavit), in France (eau de vie), and in English: whisky is the anglicized version of the Gaelic for “water of life,” uisge beatha or usquebaugh, which is what Irish and Scots monks called their distilled barley beer.

    On Food and Cooking, The Science and Lore of the Kitchen Harold McGee 2004

  • Which English word is a shortened form of "usquebaugh", which English borrowed from Gaelic, meaning "water of life"?

    The Friday Brain-teaser from Credo Reference 2008

  • The dinner ended with cheese and oatcake, accompanied by a few small glasses of "usquebaugh," capital whisky, five and twenty years old -- just Harry's age.

    The Underground City 1877

  • While the old Professor was revived with copious draughts of "usquebaugh," Jack Blunt saw the flash below him, on the darkened seas, of a red light above a white one.

    A Fascinating Traitor An Anglo-Indian Story Richard Savage 1874

  • "usquebaugh," capital whisky, five and twenty years old -- just Harry's age.

    The Underground City, or, the Child of the Cavern Jules Verne 1866

  • "usquebaugh" is probably an anglicized phonetic rendering of the Irish Gaelic phrase "uisce beatha" -- which translates to "water of life".

    MetaFilter Max Power 2010

  • "I roll your word for liquor, usquebaugh, around my mouth", the speaker says reverently, before letting the whiskey drip down into a lustrous final couplet in which the last line is spun out beyond its natural length to extend the warmth of the moment: "You are distilled before you disappear forever/like the raised glass, the sunlight on one last golden measure."

    In the Flesh by Adam O'Riordan 2010

  • The word “whisky” is a shortened form of the Gaelic word usquebaugh, or “water of life,” i.e., aqua vitae.

    Margin Walker | ATTACKERMAN 2008

Comments

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  • water of life (whiskey)

    February 14, 2007

  • See mollusque baugh.

    April 16, 2011