fuddlecap
Noun

fuddlecap (plural fuddlecaps)

  1. (obsolete) Someone who drinks alcoholic beverages too freely. [17th—19th centuries.]
    • 1666, S.W., “A Paraphrase upon the first Ode” in The Poems of Horace consisting of Odes, Satyres, and Epistles, rendred in English verse by several persons, London: Henry Brome, p. 3,
      The Fuddlecap, whose God’s the Vyne,
      Lacks not the Sun if he have Wine;
    • 1700, Ned Ward, A Journey to Hell, or, A Visit Paid to the Devil, London, Part 2, Canto 8, p. 23,
      The num’rous throng of Fuddle-Caps, that here
      Promiscuously before the Bar appear,
      On others ruine have themselves enrich’d,
      And with their charming Juice the World bewitch’d.
    • 1728, Thomas Woolston, A Fourth Discourse on the Miracles of our Saviour, London: for the author, p. 33,
      […] it is a broken and witless Sentence, such as Fuddlecaps utter by halves, when the Wine’s in, and the Wit’s out.
    • 1840, William Mudford, Stephen Dugard, London: R. Bentley, Volume 1, Chapter 11, p. 122,
      “ […] Here, fuddle-cap,” he continued, giving her some brandy, “drink, and then tell me the best news you have […] .”
Synonyms


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