See also: Drinkwater

English edit

Etymology edit

From Middle English drinkwater (attested as a nickname), equivalent to drink +‎ water. Compare Saterland Frisian Drinkwoater (drinkwater), West Frisian drinkwetter (drinkwater), Dutch drinkwater (drinkwater), German Low German Drinkwater (drinkwater), German Trinkwasser (drinkwater).

Noun edit

drinkwater (uncountable)

  1. Potable water; water intended for drinking
    • 1905, Cape of Good Hope (South Africa). Colonial Secretary's Dept. Local Government and Health Branch, Reports:
      In very dry seasons some drinkwater is brought from wells dug in the bed of the river, about half-an hour from the village.
    • 1916, McClure's Magazine, volume 47:
      “I'll come back and bring you some drinkwater," he said.

Synonyms edit

Adjective edit

drinkwater (not comparable)

  1. (of a place) Small, rural, and insignificant.
    • 1972, Barry Brissman, Swing low, page 60:
      And for a moment it seemed that everything would be all right, that we were traveling back in time to that idyllic farm near a drinkwater town in Iowa, back to my boyhood, and that Mina would always smile up at me from her bed.
    • 2014, Richard Hoyt, Decoys: A John Denson Mystery, →ISBN, page 50:
      I'm surprised they have that kind of thing in a drinkwater place like this.
    • 2016, Michael Kahmann, A Contract For Ethan:
      “[...] Heard she killed two of them Jenson brothers in some drinkwater town in Kansas?”

Synonyms edit

Dutch edit

Etymology edit

Compound of drinken +‎ water.

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): /ˈdriŋkˌʋaː.tər/
  • Audio:(file)
  • Hyphenation: drink‧wa‧ter

Noun edit

drinkwater n (plural drinkwateren or drinkwaters, diminutive drinkwatertje n)

  1. drinking water

Derived terms edit