different between wine vs voidee

wine

English

Pronunciation

  • enPR: w?n, IPA(key): /wa?n/
  • Rhymes: -a?n
  • Homophone: whine (in accents with the wine-whine merger)

Etymology 1

From Middle English wyn, win, from Old English w?n, from Proto-West Germanic *w?n, from Latin v?num. Doublet of vine.

Noun

wine (countable and uncountable, plural wines)

  1. An alcoholic beverage made by fermenting the juice of grapes.
    Wine is stronger than beer.
    She ordered some wine for the meal.
    • 1962 (quoting 1381 text), Hans Kurath & Sherman M. Kuhn, eds., Middle English Dictionary, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan Press, ISBN 978-0-472-01044-8, page 1242:
      dorr??, d?r? adj. & n. [] cook. glazed with a yellow substance; pome(s ~, sopes ~. [] 1381 Pegge Cook. Recipes page 114: For to make Soupys dorry. Nym onyons [] Nym wyn [] toste wyte bred and do yt in dischis, and god Almande mylk.
  2. An alcoholic beverage made by fermenting the juice of fruits or vegetables other than grapes, usually preceded by the type of the fruit or vegetable; for example, "dandelion wine".
  3. (countable) A serving of wine.
    I'd like three beers and two wines, please.
  4. (uncountable) A dark purplish red colour; the colour of red wine.
Hyponyms
  • See also Thesaurus:wine
  • Derived terms
    Related terms
    Descendants
    Translations

    Verb

    wine (third-person singular simple present wines, present participle wining, simple past and past participle wined)

    1. (transitive) To entertain with wine.
      • 1919, Lee Meriwether, The War Diary of a Diplomat, Dodd, Mead and Company, page 159:
        Neither Major Wadhams nor I is accustomed to being wined and dined by perfect strangers who do not even present themselves, but leave servants to do the honors, consequently to both of us our present situation smacks of romance and adventure;
    2. (intransitive) To drink wine.
    Translations

    See also

    Etymology 2

    A variant of wind with simplification of the final consonant cluster; for the vowel quality, compare find, mind, rind.

    Noun

    wine (uncountable)

    1. (Britain dialect) Wind.

    Middle English

    Etymology 1

    From Old English wine, from earlier wini.

    Pronunciation

    • IPA(key): /?win(?)/

    Noun

    wine (plural wines or wine) (Early Middle English)

    1. friend
    2. relative
    Related terms
    • wiþerwine
    References
    • “wine, n.(1).”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007.

    Etymology 2

    Verb

    wine

    1. Alternative form of wyn (wine)

    Etymology 3

    Verb

    wine

    1. Alternative form of winnen (to win)

    Etymology 4

    Noun

    wine

    1. Alternative form of vine (grapevine)

    Middle High German

    Alternative forms

    • win

    Etymology

    From Old High German wini.

    Noun

    wine m

    1. friend

    Old English

    Alternative forms

    • wini

    Etymology

    From Proto-West Germanic *wini.

    Cognate with Old Frisian wine, Old Saxon wini, Old High German wini, Old Norse vinr. The Indo-European root is also the source of Latin venus, Proto-Celtic *wenja- (Old Irish fine).

    Pronunciation

    • IPA(key): /?wi.ne/

    Noun

    wine m

    1. (poetic) friend

    Usage notes

    Used as a second element of many personal names. It could be appended to mythical creatures (Ælfwine "elf friend," Entwine "giant friend"), animals (?owine "horse friend," Earnwine "eagle friend," Seolhwine "seal friend," L?owine "lion friend," G?swine "goose friend," Eoforwine "boar friend," Wulfwine "wolf friend," Hundwine "dog friend"), inanimate objects (Seaxwine "knife friend," Goldwine "gold friend," Ealuwine "ale friend"), locations (Centwine "friend of Kent"), features of nature (S?wine "sea friend," Wealdwine "forest friend"), kinds of people (Wealhwine "friend of foreigners," Cnihtwine "friend of boys"), or abstract concepts (M?dwine "mind friend"). It was also often used with adjectives, usually praising the owner of the name, as in Beorhtwine ("bright friend"), Ealdwine ("old friend"), and D?orwine ("dear friend").

    Declension

    Derived terms

    Descendants

    • Middle English: wine
      • ? English: (a component found in names – Baldwin, Godwin, Irwin, etc.)

    References

    • John R. Clark Hall (1916) , “wine”, in A Concise Anglo-Saxon Dictionary, 2nd edition, New York: Macmillan.

    Unami

    Etymology

    • /win/: of snow, snowy
    • /e/: verb marker
    • /-w/: third person suffix

    Verb

    wine (inanimate intransitive)

    1. (inanimate, intransitive) it snows, it is snowing

    Related terms

    • kun

    References

    • Rementer, Jim; Pearson, Bruce L. (2005) , “wine”, in Leneaux, Grant; Whritenour, Raymond, editors, The Lenape Talking Dictionary, The Lenape Language Preservation Project

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    voidee

    English

    Alternative forms

    • voide [14th-15th c.]

    Etymology

    From Old French [Term?].

    Pronunciation

    • (UK) IPA(key): /?v??di?/

    Noun

    voidee (plural voidees)

    1. (now only historical) A cup of wine drunk with spices or other small accompaniments, taken before retiring to bed or before the departure of guests; also, a larger snack or small meal taken in similar circumstances.
      • c. 1385, Geoffrey Chaucer, Troilus and Criseyde, Book III:
        Ther nys no more, but here-after soone, / The voide dronke, and trauers drawe anon, / Gan euery wight that hadde nought to done / More in the place out of the chaumbre gon [...].
      • 1400, JN. Shirley, Dethe of James Stewarde, Kyng of Scotys, page 13, ed. 1818:
        Within an owre the Kyng askid the voidee, and drank, the travers yn the chambure edraw, and every man depairtid and went to rist.
      • a. 1826, notes to Ann Ward Radcliffe’s Gaston de Blondeville, in The Posthumous Works of Mrs. Radcliffe, Volume III, Henry Colburn (publisher, 1826), page 83:
        Before the voidee, came in five score couple, Earles, Barons, and Knights, over and besides Squiers, having collers and chains of gould, every each of them throughout, bearing the one of them a spice-plate, the other a cuppe, beside yeomen of the guard that followed them with potts of wine to fill the cuppes. The spice-plates were furnished in the most goodly manner with spices, after the manner of a voidee; and the cuppes were replenished with wine, and universally throughout the said hall distributed.

    References

    • http://www.islandnet.com/~egbird/dict/v.htm
    • Shipley, Joseph T (1955). Dictionary of Early English. New York, Philosophical Library. Page 711.

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