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Origin and history of wino

wino(n.)

"habitual drunkard," especially if indigent and drinking cheap wine, 1915, from wine + slang suffix -o as in bucko, kiddo.

Entries linking to wino

term of address, 1883, originally nautical and with a sense of "swaggering, domineering fellow." Probably from buck (n.1) in the slang sense of "a blood or choice spirit."

There are in London divers lodges or societies of Bucks, formed in imitation of the Free Masons: one was held at the Rose, in Monkwell-street, about the year 1705. The president is styled the Grand Buck. ["Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue," 1811]

1893, familiar form of kid (n.) in the "child" sense + slang suffix -o.

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Trends of wino

adapted from books.google.com/ngrams/ with a 7-year moving average; ngrams are probably unreliable.

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