Difference between revisions of "Whine - wine"
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+ | '''Whine''' and '''wine''' {{bridges}} | ||
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These two near-[[homophone]]s are indistinguishable in a southern English accent (see [[W - Wh]]). The context should make it hard to confuse them, but careless writers can spell them the wrong way. | These two near-[[homophone]]s are indistinguishable in a southern English accent (see [[W - Wh]]). The context should make it hard to confuse them, but careless writers can spell them the wrong way. | ||
* The [[verb]] 'to '''w<big>h</big>ine'''' means to make a high-pitched, rather nasal noise with the voice; "To utter complaints in a low querulous tone; to complain in a feeble, mean, or undignified way" (''[[OED]]''). One can '''whine''' [[intransitive]]ly without words (dogs sometimes do, when they want a door to be opened for them); one can talk in a '''whining''' tone - children can be heard to whine in shops when they want something which a parent is refusing to buy, like sweets. There is a rarer [[noun]], a '''w<big>h</big>ine''' is the name of the noise, or complaint. | * The [[verb]] 'to '''w<big>h</big>ine'''' means to make a high-pitched, rather nasal noise with the voice; "To utter complaints in a low querulous tone; to complain in a feeble, mean, or undignified way" (''[[OED]]''). One can '''whine''' [[intransitive]]ly without words (dogs sometimes do, when they want a door to be opened for them); one can talk in a '''whining''' tone - children can be heard to whine in shops when they want something which a parent is refusing to buy, like sweets. There is a rarer [[noun]], a '''w<big>h</big>ine''' is the name of the noise, or complaint. | ||
− | * '''Wine''' is basically a [[noun]]. It means an alcoholic drink. Properly this is made from the juice of grapes; since the sixteenth century at least, it has been transferred to drinks made by fermenting the juice of other fruits, or even vegetables: 'elderberry wine' and 'parsnip wine' are easier to produce in the British climate. Other [[figurative]] uses are common. Thomas Carlyle said "Literature is the wine of life" (''Thomas Carlyle: a history of the first forty years of his life, | + | * '''Wine''' is basically a [[noun]]. It means an alcoholic drink. Properly this is made from the juice of grapes; since the sixteenth century at least, it has been transferred to drinks made by fermenting the juice of other fruits, or even vegetables: 'elderberry wine' and 'parsnip wine' are easier to produce in the British climate. Other [[figurative]] uses are common. Thomas Carlyle said "Literature is the wine of life" (''Thomas Carlyle: a history of the first forty years of his life, 1795–1835'' I. xvi. 271 (1882); and uses about the heady effect of weather are common: "Cheered by the keen wine of that dry and bracing frost" ([[Charles Kingsley]], ''Hereward the Wake'', I. Prel. 19 (both quotations cited in ''[[OED]]''). There is a [[verb]] 'to '''wine'''', most commonly in the phrase 'to wine and dine' someone. It means to entertain that person to [a meal, and] alcoholic drink. (Do not confuse its past form '''wined''' with the [[Wind (homographs)|two homographs wind]], which is possible by careless typing.) |
[[category:homophones]] | [[category:homophones]] | ||
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[[category:typos]] | [[category:typos]] | ||
[[category:disambig]] | [[category:disambig]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Bridges II]] |
Latest revision as of 18:52, 17 February 2018
Whine and wine form one of the sets of homophones listed by the then Poet Laureate Robert Bridges.
(For more, see Bridges homophones). AWE has a category listing our articles on each of these.
These two near-homophones are indistinguishable in a southern English accent (see W - Wh). The context should make it hard to confuse them, but careless writers can spell them the wrong way.
- The verb 'to whine' means to make a high-pitched, rather nasal noise with the voice; "To utter complaints in a low querulous tone; to complain in a feeble, mean, or undignified way" (OED). One can whine intransitively without words (dogs sometimes do, when they want a door to be opened for them); one can talk in a whining tone - children can be heard to whine in shops when they want something which a parent is refusing to buy, like sweets. There is a rarer noun, a whine is the name of the noise, or complaint.
- Wine is basically a noun. It means an alcoholic drink. Properly this is made from the juice of grapes; since the sixteenth century at least, it has been transferred to drinks made by fermenting the juice of other fruits, or even vegetables: 'elderberry wine' and 'parsnip wine' are easier to produce in the British climate. Other figurative uses are common. Thomas Carlyle said "Literature is the wine of life" (Thomas Carlyle: a history of the first forty years of his life, 1795–1835 I. xvi. 271 (1882); and uses about the heady effect of weather are common: "Cheered by the keen wine of that dry and bracing frost" (Charles Kingsley, Hereward the Wake, I. Prel. 19 (both quotations cited in OED). There is a verb 'to wine', most commonly in the phrase 'to wine and dine' someone. It means to entertain that person to [a meal, and] alcoholic drink. (Do not confuse its past form wined with the two homographs wind, which is possible by careless typing.)