fourses
English
Etymology
See four and elevenses.
Noun
fourses (usually uncountable, plural fourses)
- (Britain, dialectal, historical) A light meal taken out to agricultural labourers in the afternoon.
- 1837 February, Anna Lee, “The Pinch of Salt”, in The Ladies’ Companion: A Monthly Magazine, Embracing Literature and the Arts, […], volume VI, New York, N.Y.: Published by William W. Snowdon, OCLC 6444302, page 162, column 2:
- The harvestmen who board in the farm-houses are sumptuously during the month of harvest.— […] at eleven o'clock in the morning, and four in the afternoon, they have each a large light plum-bun, with a pint of ale a piece, carried into the field, to encourage them to work cheerfully. These extra refreshments they call, in their provincial language, their "elevenses" and "fourses." I could not at first imagine what the servants meant by talking of carrying the harvestmen their elevenses and fourses, till Mrs. Henley explained that it was a vulgar abbreviation of the four-o'clock and eleven o'clock meals.
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Coordinate terms
- elevenses
Translations
light meal in the afternoon