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Dry

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Thirsty. Hence to drink is to “wet your whistle” (i.e. throat); and malt liquor is called “heavy wet.” (Anglo-Saxon dryg, dry.)

 

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Entry taken from Dictionary of Phrase and Fable, edited by the Rev. E. Cobham Brewer, LL.D. and revised in 1895.

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Drummond Light
Drumsticks
Drunk
Drunkard’s Cloak (A)
Drunken Deddington
Drunkenness
Drunkenness
Drupner [the dripper]
Drury Lane (London)
Druses
Dry
Dry Blow (A)
Dry Goods (in merchandise)
Dry Lodgings
Dry-nurse
Dry Rot
Dry Sea (A)
Dry Shave (A)
Dry Style (of writing)
Dry Wine
Dryads

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